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•

Pege 10-The Daily Senti•.al

THE
CENTRAL
TRUST
COMPANY
"Your Financial
Center"
97 NORTH SECOND
•DDLEPOIT, OHIO
992-6661

. ..

.•

"

.

•
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

19 more
days 'til

Thi1
Week'1
6sme1

. Daily Number
351
Pick-4
3.812

Christmas

Ra•ll•e•

Coat•
Blo11ar
Fa•eral
Ho•e
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

INSTAUMEHT
LOANS
. 992-3077

•

•

at
Vol.39, No.148
Copyoightod 1988

w-

..
1 Sections. 1 0 Pagn

'

Pomeroy considering
zoning, housing laws

BOYS .

ChtvroleteOidsmobilt
eCadillac, Inc.

Sales &amp; Service

EASTERN

EAST IWN ST.
POMEROY

Dec. 9-0ok Hill-Home
Dec. 13-llyger Creek-Away

Your Dealer on
The River.
f

992-6144

.j!., .

VALLEY

Dec. 5-Southsrn-Homl
Dec. 8-Trimble·Away

LUMBER

BOYS

555 PARK ST.
MIDDLEPORT
992-6611

GIRLS
Dec. 7-Trimble Horne
Dec. 8-0ok Hill-Away

SOUTHERN
BOYS
Dec.9-Symmes Yallty-Away
Dec. 1.3-North Gallia-Home

HO! HO! HO!- As
Claus was
the most popular fellow In Monday night's
Middleport Christmas parade. Santa waved to his
fans along the parade route, and following the

GIRLS
Dec. S-Meigs-Away
~- I·SytillltS Valley-Home

A
FOR BREAKFAST
LUN(H &amp; DINNER
Fltaturing

* Grut Hambqers
* Roast Beet on a
Croisunt * Stuffed Baked
Potltoes * Taco Salads
* Salld Bar
* Real lee Cream *
Dining • Carry Out •
Drive-Thru •

Mon.·Thu,.. &amp; A.M.·1 1 P.M.
Fri.• Set. I A.M.-12 P.M.
SundWf 7 A.M.·1 1 P.M.
Ill W. M~n Slrelll, Pom•oy

992-2067

BlUM

&lt;t~
HARDWAIE
..,_ ........w._w Pl«t''
915·3301

CHESTEI, OH.

HOURS:
Mon. thru Fri.
7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Saturday
7~0 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

-----------------BOYS SCHEDULE-----------------MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 80VS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL·
19B8-B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
19BB·89 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 25-Athens .......................... Away
Dec. 2-M iller ............................ Home
Dec. 9-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 13-Nelsonville·York ............ Away
Dec. 16-Wellston ...................... Home
Dec. 20-Vinton Co...................... Away
Dec. 23-Athens .......................... Away
Dec. 30-Lopn ............................ Away
Jan. 3-Belpre .....................~ ...... Home
Jan. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Federal Hocking .. :.......... Away
Jan. 13-Miller ............................ Away
Jan. 17-Warren ......................... Home
Jan. 20-Trimble .......................... Away
Jan. 24-Nelsonville·York ............. home
Jan. 27-Wellston ........................ Away
Jan. 31-Vinton Co..................... Home
Feb. 3-Belpre :............................ Away
Feb. 7-Alexander ....................... Home
Feb. 10-Federal Hockin............. Home

Nov. 22-Miller ........................... Away
Nov. 29-Southern ............. ;........ Home
Dec. 2-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 9-0ak Hill ......................... Home
·Dec. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Dec. 16-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 17-Federal Hockihg ............. Away
Dec. 20-Southwestern ............... Home
Jan. 3-Federal Hocking ............... Home
Jan. &amp;-Symmes Valley ............... :. Away
Jan. 10-Southern ....................... Away
Jan. 13-North Galli a...... ;........... Home
Jan. 14-Parkersburg Cath .......... Home
Jan. 20-0ak Hiii ..........................Away
Jan: 24-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Jan. 27-Hannan Trace ............. ,... Away
Jan. 28-Miller ........................... Home
Feb. 3-Soulhwestern .................. Away
Feb. 10-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Feb. 14-Parkersburg Cath ........... Away

No. 26-Aiexander ....................!. Home
Nov. 29-Eastern ......................... Away
Dec. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Dec . .9-Symmes Valley ................ Away
Dec. 13-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 16-0ak Hill ........................ Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ................ Home
Dec. 27-Green ............................ Away
Jan. 6-·Southwestern ................... Away
Jan. 7-Gallipolis ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Eastern ......................... Home
Jan. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Jan. 20-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Jan. 21-Ravenswood ................... Away
Jan. 24-North Galli a................... Away
Jan. 27-Oak Hill ........................ Home
Feb. 3-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Feb. 4-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Feb ..10-Southwestern ........... :.... Home

----------------------~IRLSSCHEDULE:-------------------MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
19BB-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Eastern ........................ Home

Dec. 1-liller ............................. Away

.Dec. 5-Southern ........................ Home
Dec. &amp;-Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville-York ........... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co..................... Home
Dec. 21-Eastern ......................... Away
Jan. 2-Belpre ............................. Away
Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12-Miller ........................... Home
Jan. 19-Trimble..........;.............. Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York ............. Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ...................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hockin1 ............... Away
Feb. 11-Southern ....................... Away

•

. . H. Ewillt-Dinctor

PH. 992-2121
,.

101 MUliEIIY AYE. ·
POMROY, OH.
I

•

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988·89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Meigs ........................... Away
Nov. 28-Southern ....................... Away
Dec. 1-North Gallia ................... Home
Dec. 7-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 8-:-0ak Hill .................... ,..... Away
Dec. 12 -Kyger Creek .................. Home
Dec. 15-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 17-Fe·deral Hocking ............ Home
Dec. 19-Southwestern ................ Away
Dec. 21-Meigs ........................... Home
Jan. 5-Symmes Valley ................ Home
Jan. 9-Southern ........................ Home
Jan. 11-Trimble .......................... Away
Jan. 12-North Gallia ................... Away
Jan. 19-0ak Hill ........................ Home
· Jan. 23-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Jan. 26-Hannan Trace .........·....... Home
Feb. 2-Southwestern .. :.............. Home
Feb. ·6-Symmes Valley ................ Away

Nov. 21-Aiexander ...................... Away
nov. 28-Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Kyger Creek.. ................... Away
Dec. 5-Meigs ............ ,................ Away
Dec. 8-Symmes Valley ............... Home
Dec. 12-North Gallia .................. Away
Dec. 15-0ak Hill ....................... Home
Dec. 19-Hannan Trace ............... :Away
Dec. 22-Aiexander ..................... Home
Jan. 5-Southwestern .................. Home
Jan. 9-Eastern .......................... Home
Jan. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Jan. 14-Waterford ...................... Away
Jan. 19-Symmes Valley ............... Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 30-Waterford ..................... Home
Feb. 2-Hannan Trace ................. Home
Feb. 6-Sout.hweslern .................. Away
Feb. 11-Me~gs ........................... Home

''HOME BANK

POWELL'S

FOR

HOME PEOPlE"

OF
FURNITURE!

Bay More for
at
EMPIRE
FURNITURE

Ll••

992-3307
POMEROY, OHIO

WE WILL
TAKE CARE OF
ALL YOUR
INSURANCE
NEEDS
DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN, MUSSER
INSURANCE
Ill SECOND AVE.
POMEROY

CALL 992-3381 or

992-2342

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Bill Webb of Gallipolis has f&lt;ljlnd
himself in another struggle with the
Mason Couniy Board of Education,
and~~illg 10 do with
his wardrobe, but a lot 10 do with
his children's education.
Webb, who has been suspended
from school three times this year
for not followin~ a dress code is·
sued by Supenntendent Charles
Chambers, has received an out-of·
state tuition bill for Sl,791.37 for
his daughter Jerrod, a senior and
student body president at Point
Pleasanl High School.
However, Webb believes if the

school board wants to nit-pick, it
owes him about 17 times that
much.
"I definitely think it's harass·
ment," Webb said this morning.
Webb said &amp;bat he has discussed the
mai!Cr with his atlomey, and the
two of them wiU pursue the issue.
"I can't call it any other word bui
harassment" .
The.bill was for Jerrod to ai!Cnd
classes in Mason County, Out-of·
statelll are usually required 10 pay
tuition to attend Mason County
schools.
He said that if the board per·
sists in the matter, he would present
them with a bill for $33,000, which
• is what he would have collected for
the 12 extra classes that he has

I

ROCKY HILL, Conn. (UP!)Ames Department Stores Inc.
will close 74 Zayre discount
stores and three of Its own Ames
stores in Ohio and 16 other states.
mostly in the southeast, right
after Christmas, the company
announced Monday.
About two thirds of ihe 7,500 to
8,000 employees affected are
part-time workers, said Catherine G. LeoMrd , spokeswoman
for Ames, the nation's No. 3
discount retailer.
Ames Is completely pulling out
of seven states: Alabama. Geor·
gia, Iowa, Louisiana, Missls·
sippi, Tennessee and Wisconsin,
Leonard said. A total of 58 Zayre
stores in those states will be shut,
she added.
"The 77 stores will be closed
Dec. 31 and will reopen Jan. 1 for
golng-out·Of·buslness sales." Pe·
ter B. Hollis, Ames president and
chief executive officer, said In a
statement.
Three Zayre field o!lices "that
are strictly fo r store operations"

'

\'COM£ GROW ·
WITH US

.

FOOD STO.RE
EAST MAIN ST.
PO.IOY

eM.uoiiiiii'AIIII
oCOMI'WTI-11. AU-IHT

···~-

~ MAoiOII CIIIDIT CAllOS

•Self Serve Gas

~CCII'ftll

PAT 1111. ,_, Inc.

l992-219ij
461 liD AYE.

.....-r, ott.

298 SE&lt;OND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

SYIA(USE OFFKE
992-6333
RACINE OFFICE
949-2210

•Ohio Lottery Tlclceu

STOlE HOURS:

•Bread
•Hunting LictnH

MON.-SAT.

•VCR Rentlill •Milk

OWfa DAN SIDWEU

&lt;

'

.

992-9907

I A.M.·10 P.M.
SUNDAY
10 A.M.-10 P.M. •:.

.fARMERS
..
. . BANK
&amp; SAYINGS CO.
POMEROYI 011.

.......

PH. 992-2136
-... .._ \

.

r-~~----------~~

taught over tbe years.
"We"ll excbange checks; that
would suit me fine," Webb said,
adding, "''ll come out ahead."
Webb says that he struck a deal
in 1980 wil)r 'the school system 10
teacllextra"'classes in lieu of tuition
for his children during the time tllat
Jerry Brewster was· superintendent.
He has been teaching ·one or two
extra math classes a year for
several years. with the understand·
ing that it was in exchange for tui·
lion.
"I'll pay my bill when they pay
theirs,'1 Webb said.
Webb 51lid that two years ago,
tuition for his two children would
have been about $3,000, and if he
Continued on page 10

also will be eliminated, Leonard ham Lambert, In('., said the
said. However, "we have not closings were "previously ex·
made any announcement abOut pected" and lhe company had
offices thaI serve many states, already set' aside an undisclosed
such as distribution centers, amount for the lmmedla te costs.
warehouses or financial offices Ames prqjects $5.4 billion in sales ·
... and we're not looking at at its remaining stores in the
closing any of those."
upcoming year.
The mass closing leaves the
Leonard said all Zayre em·
company with 318 Zayre and 361
ployees
would be given a chance
Ames stores, LeoMrd said. .
Ames bought the money-losing to relocate to another job else·
Zayre chain In an $800-miiUon where with the company.' 'Tllose
cash and stock deal In Sep· that are unable or unwilling to
tember . That transaction relocate will receive a severance
vaulted Ames Into the No. 3 package based on their length of
position among the nation's dis· service," she said.
count retailers, behind only Wal·
mart and K mart. In his
"It probably is not going to be
statement, Hollis said: "Closing wortll the while of part-time
unprofitable stores is essential to · workers in the South to relocate
our main task, that of returnlng to another area of the country,"
theremalnlng318Zayre stores to Leonard conceded. However, she
the! r · his torte leve 1 · of added, the average of six manprofitability."
agement people In each store
The cuts reportedly could save would be more likely to move,
Ames about $50 mllllon annually. partlculary in the states where
Jeffrey Edelman, an analyst who Ames is not closing all Its
covers Ames for Drexel Burn· operations.

;AND .

oCOMPI.ITIIIAIIIATOIIII!IIVIC1!

commission were Carson Crow,
Mary Powell, Frank Porter III,
Tom ReedandMikeStruble. This J
commission wlll oversee a recently passed ordlMnce which
restricts renovation and restora·
lion of ·buildings In the village.
However, council will make the
final decision In matters regard· .
lng restoration and renovation
procedures.
·
Chrisimas bonuses for village
employees were approved .by
co.uncilat therateof$100forei!Ch
of 24 fulltlme employees, and $50
each for five parttlme
employees.
Thanks were extended by
Council to Phil Globokar, who
donated the Christmas tree in the
parking lot, and to Ed Durst, who
has donated a tree for the village
hall.
'
Minor street problems in a
couple of areas of. the vUiage•
were reported, and finally, · the:.
mayor's report of $6,760 In fines;
and fees collected lor the month•
of November was approved by:
council.
;

Ames to close 3 Ohio outlets

LimE DAN
EXXON •

MEMIER FDIC

proposal.
By NANCY YOACHAM
A housing ordinance. which
Sentinel News Stall
could
place limitations on dwel·
Possible zoning and housing
lings
with regard to . public
ordinances for Pomeroy are
health,
safety and welfare, would
being given serious consldera·
be a separate ordinance, O'Brien
lion by Pomeroy Village Co~ncii.
Requlrem;nts for passing such said.
"You can adopt anything you
ordinances were explained at
Monday night's regular councll need," O'Brien said, "based
upon the needs of the village and
meeting by Pomeroy Attorney
the statutes ." Ordinances may
Patrick O'Brien.
also be amerided after passage,
The first step in passing a
according to statutes.
.
zoning ordinance, O'Brien said,
"Then
let's
form
a
planning
is to form a f!ve.member plan·
ning commission, as set forth in commission," said Councilman
state statutes, to consist of the Larry Wehrung. Council was in
agreement with Wehrung and
mayor; one councll member, and
suggestions
of possible names to
three citizens who are appointed
the
planning
commission will be
by the mayor.
presented
at
the next regular
Once appointed, this commis·
Council
meeting.
slon would review the layout of
Meanwhile, O'Brien will con·
the village in detall, decide the
researching zoning and
tlnue
types of zoning needed ln.Pome·
parade, took lime out from his busy hoUday roy, develop a comprehensive housing ordinances from other
schedule to visit with young friends who braved zoning plan for the village and . communities which are com par·
able In size with Pomeroy.
the cold to sit on his lap and share their Christmas· then report the plan to CounciL
wishes.
·
In another matter. a five·
At some point, local residents
would have the opportunity to member historic preservation
voice opinions on the zoning commission was approved by
Council last night. Named to that

Mason board bills teacher·
By JEANNIE SURFACE
OVP Starr

EWING
.
:FUNERAL
HOME
"DIGNITY AND
SERYI&lt;E• ALWAYS"

COMPLETE.
SELECTION

26 Cants

A Muh:imedia Inc. NewiC)aper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday, December 6. 1988 .

MEIGS
D~.

•
•

•

614-992-5141

r--------.., · 9-Trlmble·Home
Dec. 13-Nelsonville York
Jim Cobb
GIRLS

Sunny. Tonight, low In mid •
30s. Wednesday, variable ·.
cloudiness. IDgh 40 to 45.

-·

•

~ \ r ~

.r........ ~ ·-

'
CHRISTMAS PIONSETI'IAS - More than 000
pots of the popular Chrlstmllll flower, the
poinsettia, were sold by the Pomeroy PTO and
• Pomeroy Elementary students as a special lund
raising project. To encourage the youngs~rs lo

"NATIVITY SCENE - Eric White and Penny
Lewis portrayed Joseph and Mary In the manger
during Monday evening's Christmas parade In

Middleport. The two youths were on the float from
the Middleport First Baptist Church.

Atlantis slated to land today

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UP!) -The crew of the shuttle
Atlantis was scheduled to glide to
a California landing Tuesday,
NASA announced Monday, with
agency managers "happy as
hell" with the secret military
flight to put a spy satellite in
orbit.
Atlantis skipper Robert
"Hoot" Gibson and co-pilot Guy
Gardner planned to fire the
shuttle's two big braking rockets
Tuesday afternoon to begin the
ship's hourlong descent to a
touchdown at 3:36 p.m. PST at
Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
It was the first word from
NASA on the status of the 27th
shuttle mission since four hours
after bias tot! Friday from the
Kennedy Space Cenier when an
agency spokesman said the shut·
tie and its live-man all·mllltary
crew had a ''go'' for orbital
operations.
"All systems aboard the orbi·
ter Atlantis continue to perform
satisfactorily," said a NASA
statement released at 6:16 p.m.
EST Monday. "The STS-27 crew
Is doing well and Is beginning
landing preparations ."
The ·sp;~ce agency said pre·
launch
data Indicating a small
....
leak In one of Atlantis's landing
gear tires waA not considered
serious.
•'The left Inboard main landing
gear tire pressure Is not a
get out and sell, prizes were awarded. The top live. concern for landing," the NASA
statement said.
sale~~men each receiving a cash prize were
With a big radar reconnals·
Amaada Brinker, Travis Abbott, Grant Abbott,
sance
satellite thought to have
· Anna Thompson, and Billy Soulsby.
been successfully !aunched over

the weekend tef spy on the Soviet
Union, one top NASA manager
said America's 27th shuttle flight
had gone well.
"Everyone's as happy as hell,"
he said of the shuttle flight.
The shuttle's satellite payload,
code-named "Lacrosse," report·
edly is capable of taking detailed
pictures of targets on the ground,
despite cloud cover or lighting
conllltlons, adding a new dlmen·
slon to American military recon·
naissance from space.
Gibson. Gardner and their
crewmates - Richard "Mike"
Mullane, Jerry Ross and William
Shepherd - planned to land on a
dry lakebed runway at Edwards
where there is plenty of margin
for error In the event of prob·
!ems. The weather outlook for
landing is "favorable."
NASA commentary about the
flight, which stopped lour hours
after blastoff Friday, will re·
sume 30 minutes before Gibson

and Gardner fire Atlantis's brak·
lng rockets to drop the ship out of
orbit a bout an hour before
landing.
The conclusion of the esti·
mated 69-orblt, 1.7 mllllon·mile
voyage, the last shuttle flight lor
the year, will come 64 days alter
Discovery's landing at Edwards
on Oct. 3 to close out the first
post-Challenger flight.
Soviet foreign ministry spokes·
man Gennadl Geraslmov, In an
Interview Sunday, described
Atlantis's mission as an "unfor·
tuna te co Incidence" in light of
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba·
chev's visit this week tQ the
United Nations In New York. •
But NASA steadfastly refused'
to discuss the crew's flight _plan,
the status of the classified cargo
or any other aspect oft he covert
mission, which has been con·
dueled under a strict news
blackout.

..-- Loc'~ news briefe~Parties reach agreement
The landowners and other p;~rty defendants have come to an •
agreement in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court case of
Warren J. Smith, director of transportation, State of Ohlo,
versus William B. Ledlle, et al, with regard to the amount of
compensation and damages due said landowners. The
landowners shall accepl$2,000 for appropriator\ of property and
damages, as a result of construction and Improvements to State
'•
Route 124.
In ariothercourtmatter, thecaseofWiimaJ. Hammond, eta!, ·
versus Charles F. Wa~ner, has been dismissed.
Continued on page 10

__

.,
\

·'

I
I

I
I
I

�•

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
111 Court Street
Pom~roy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
A~

~m~ '""'-'._..,....~c::~·""'
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD .
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERs OF OPINION are welcoi'Df'. They should be less tban 300 words

long. All letters are subJ ect toedllln~ and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pubHshed. Letters should be In
good 1aste, addressing Issues, not persmalltles.

..

Some thoughts on
ticket-splitting

WASHINGTON - We can't
read Ups, so we took George
Bush's second bit of advice and
read his book - the 347·page
collection of his campaign
speeches gleaned from two years
on the stump.
· Surprise. Bush did talk about
the Issues beyond prison fur·
· toughs and American flag and
the Pledge of Allegiance. Had
someone followed him around
long enough, It was all there the contras. drugs, NATO. Pales·
tine, Insider trading, Angola,
gang wars, homeless shelters,
offshore drilling, global warm·
lng, even tort reform: . \
Someone did follow nun.llTOUnd
- thousands of reporters looking
for .the quote. the gesture. the
gaff. The networks, news maga.

zlnes, wire services and maJor
newspapers will arg~~e that they
wrote enough and said eno1111h on
the Issues to fill a fleet ol
dumpsters. That's true.
But the compJ.alnt on tlie lips of
nearly every voter was this:
"The candidates dido' t talk
about the Issues!' Translation: I
didn't hear the .Issues when I
turned to my primary source of
Information - television.
Ask the most Intelligent and
articulate of your friends why
they voted the way they did. The
answer Is not likely to be:
"Because Bush favors a twoyear budget cycle for major
weapons systems and an opera·
tiona! space station by 1996."
More often than not, the -

YOU WOlJLDN'T

·-

HAVe A LITTLe

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON - Well folks, you've done It again - given the
White House to the Republicans and Congress to the Democrats.
This bus.iness of ticket-splitting, which has beengotngonformostof
the time since 1952, has the experts flum.moxed. The pundits and the
professors find it inherently illogical to vote for a chief executive with
· one ideology and program and then vote for lawmakers with opposing
views who are likely to be In a position to block or override the
pres ident.
A number of theories have developed about licket·splltUng. One Is
that people do it to keep the president from becoming too dominant.
This year, in fact, one reporter said a voter told him without
prompting that he was splitting his ticket tosupporttheconstltutlonal
concept of checks and bal,ances.
Without examining that rather htgh·mlnded Idea too closely, It does
seem that there must be some other reasons for the ticket-splitting
trend.
F'irst, this really ·Is a one-way phenomenom. Since 1952, It has
Involved Republican presidents matched with a Democratic
Congresses. If voters consciously want to put reins on a new
president, why didn't John Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and Jimmy
Carter have RepubliCan congresses?
There may be a couple of clues there .
The first is that while the Democrats have held Capitol Hill
majorities most of the time since 1932, it wasn't until recently that
congressional turnover became relatively stable. In the 1930s, 50· or
75-seat party changes In the House and Senate shifts of 10 to 15 seats
were not uncommon. In 1988, 98.5 percent of House and Senate
Incumbents- mostly Democrats- were re-elected. The second has
to do with the political unity and the organizational structure of the
two major parties.
On the former, the Republicans In recent years have had fewer
glaring conflicts between regions, special Interest groups and
ideologies than the Democrats, who still have splits on major, foreign
and domestic policy Iss uPs.
Paradoxically, this may have helped Democrats running for
Congress, state or local office. When their party nominates a
perceived liberal for president, no · one finds It odd when a
conservative Democrat running for some other job simply ignores or
even disowns the top of the ticket and runs on his own platform.
Republicans, on the other h:.nd, seem to expect everyone running on
the GOP label to support the national candidates and platform.
Also paradoxically, the Republicans, who oppose "top down~
government as an article of faith, have a very centralized party
structure. Every four years, permanently assigned Republican
National Committee field ,operators who have been helping state
GOPs bul.ld their strength between elections become part of the
presidential campaign with the great advantage of "on the ground"
experience.
The Democratic National Committee has no such sophisticated
network In place, partly because.state parties don't want Washington
types teltlng them what to do. Its presidential candidates often have
to send people into states they don't know much about to issue orders
that more often than not offend the locals who must do the work. That
can cripple a presidential candidate before the campaign plane ever
lands In the state.

(Note: "No new taxes" has no
verb at all.)
Push the cotta~ aside, and the
essential George Bush comes
through as a man who Is not as
far to the right as his predecessor
except on Issues that were
winners for Ronald Reagan abortion. Star Wass, gun rights,
the contras and, defense.
When Bush ventures to be his
own man, he occasionally hedges
or offers solutions which are ·
already In the works. He makes
some firm promises and charts a
lew undeviating and Innovative
courses. But, on two crucial
Issues - drugs and the economy
- we read page after page o!
Bush verbiage and ca111e up
empty.
Ditto for the Wall Street
Investors. Their current jitters
can be blamed directly on Bush's
unwillingness to be specific dur·
lng the campaign. His speeches
are long on predictability and
short on solutions. He favors
"stability In exchange rates"
and "free markets" and "great
prosperity." The days following
the election show that Wall Street
Isn't in the market for apple pie.
Economists have pooh-poohed
his attempt at specifics - the
amorphous "!lexlble fr~e."
And Congress Is likely to stand In
the way of the two solutions Bush
states with fervor - a balanced
budget amendment and a lineItem veto.
There has been much talk of a
"mandate" for President-elect
Bush, the kind o! mandate that
usually comes from a re5pecta·
ble margin of victory after a
clear debate on the Issues.
Americans didn't give Bush a
mandate. They merely gave him"
a chance.

answer has something to do with
gut feelings . The next president
Is the man who didn't give the
maJority a stomach ache. It's no
wonder that Wall Street woke up
on Nov. 9 and wentlntoa tailspin.
Bush Is not entirely blameless.
He took positions, but they were
cushioned In the language of
cotton balls, so soft and warm
that no one on either side of the
Issue could be alarmed. Bush

promises to "encourage.'' .. re·
duce." .. make It easier, ••
••evolve;· "pursue" and ugenerate complimentary support." An
English teacher waiting for a
real action verb from candidate
Bush would walt a long ·time.

P.4R[)&gt;N?

· T~AT SACK FOR~ I

· ·WOULDJA?

A city .bargains away itS heritage Robert Walters
OMAHA, Neb. (NEA) - Not
long ago, .Jobbers' Canyon was a
resplendent array of sturdy
buildings with a proud heritage
dating back to the early 1900s,
when · Omaha emerged as a
major . distribution center fpr
goods headed west.
Plows, cultivators, windmills
and other equipment destined for
settlers In tne Great Plains, the
Rockies, the Northwest and
California were shipped !rom
this city's slx·block warehouse
dlsirlct, located on the eastern
edge of the downtown area not
far from the Missouri River.
The heart of that dis trlct was
Jobbers' Canyon, a collection of
six- to elght·story buildings that
Uned both sides of Ninth Street
for a solid block, creating a
canyonllke effect. Some of the
structurally spectacular build·
lngs had clear pine !loors 61nches
thick while others were supported by massive wooden
beams measuring almost 1¥, feet
on each side.
Only last year, the city success·
fully petitioned the Interior Department to protect the entire
district by placing It in •the

National Register of Historic
Places.
The Metropolitan Arts Council
planned to rehabilitate one
former warehouse as a center for
Its drama, dance and music
programs . an!! as a home for
Omaha's Children's Museum.
Other structures were being
renovated as apartment build·
logs. Developers expected to
attract shops and offices to an
area where 20 old-line companies
employlngs 500 people still con·
ducted light manufacturing or
warehousing operations.
Now, those dreams '- and the
architectural lntegrltyof
Jobbers' Canyon - have been
shattered by an alliance of
short-sighted politicians and In·
sensitive business executives.
In recent years,' two of Oma·
ha' s leading employers, Northw·
estern Bell and Union Pacific,
substantially reduced their work
force while another, Enron,
moved Its corporate headquar·
ters and 1,500 jobs to Texas.
Thus, local politicians were
concerned when another Omaha·
based firm, . ConAgra Inc., last
year announced its Intention to
build a new headquarters com·

Noted Harper: "Some people
love old red brick buildings.
Some don't." Nobody here
needed a further explanation of
his position.
The city that only a year
earlier had designated the build·
lngs along Jobbers' Canyon trea·
sured landmarks hastily reclas·
silled them as "blighted and
substandard," and thus subJect
to condemnation proceedings
and demolition. Seven buildings
already have been torn down,
leaving the historic block a ·
gap-toothed parody of Its former
self.
Although 40 grand old build·
tngs eventually will be des·
troyed, not one Is located on the
site of . ConAgra's structure.
Instead, Jobbers' Canyon Is
being sacrificed for an oversized
driveway leading to the corporate offices.
"In our coUectlve greed and
fear, we are accepting com prom·
lses that will Irrevocably diminIsh our urban quality," says
Omaha architect George
Haecker. "I fear Omaha will
finally and Irrevocably be Ia·.
beled a provincial backwater."

plex and hinted that the firm
might relocate away from
Omaha and even outside
Nebraska.
One of the nation's largest and
most diversified argrlbuslness
corporations, ConAgra produces
everything from dairy feed and
grain fertilizer to 1 catfish and
premium steaks. Its Armour,
Swift and· ' Montfort units are
maJor meatpac~ers, while Its
frozen foods are sold under the
Banquet, Morton, Patio and
Chun King labels.
Losing more than 1,000 existing
ConAgra Jobs in Omaha would
have been a devastating setback
for the city, but retaining the
expanded headquarters opera·
tlon could eventually produce a
doubling of the company's local
workiorce.
ConAgra accepted the city's
offer . of a large weed· and
debris-strewn tract between the
warehouse district and the river
for Its new headquarters. But
Charles M. "Mikp" Harper, the
company's chairman known for
his bare-knuckled management
style, was unhappy with· the
adJacent ''big, ugly red
bu Udlngs."

Early this year George Bush
appeared to stumble over the
most Important requirement for
an American president: vision,
or as It was put, "The V·Thlng."
By summer Bush not only has a
vision and spoke out about It, but
It was the right one: "Freedom

c

0t0MIN6
. ................... .
:::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::: ::::

....................................
················ ............... ....
..................................
.

. A :
".. K\Nt&gt;ER, .~:
[[GENTLER :
~~ tOO'tON

........
... .
......
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......
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.....
......
.......
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--

L------------------------....1

Now, as Bush assembles a
foreign policy and defense team~
he and his minions should once
again Think Big. Thusly: Is there
a relationship of the Big V to the
likely, and peculiar, nature ofthe
1990s? Yes. And It is more
Important than Star Wars,
START talks, or trade balances.
To think this through, the
Bushntcks should trot out some
old military criteria: What Is the
terrain? What are the condl·
!Ions? What Is the goal? How do
you get·there?
The global terrain of the '90s
can be summed up In a word:
"different." To begin a long llst:
an economically united Western
Europe, a turbulent Eastern
Europe, a rolling, more open
Soviet Union, a booming Asia,
China In a U·turn.
·
The global conditions. from an
American point of view, are
stunning. Despite talk about the
economy·ln -dlsarray and
America-In-decline, there Is this
fact: Never has the culture of one
nation been so far-flung and
potent.
·
Consider: last year alone, 40
million . VCRs were sold; the
cassettes that go In them show
mostly American movies and

j

Pennzoil team cops second title
FIVE POINTS- Th~ C&amp;D Penn·
zoll Racing Team headed by
driver Curt Nalstetler recently
claimed its s~ond straight poirlts
championship In a big way, by
winning the prestigious $2,000 to
win "Fall ·Classic" at National
Trails Oragway In Columbus.
Nalstetter, moving up to a
more competitive class, coasted
through the 2·day, eight round
qualifying elimination rounds
before squaring off against two
former champions with national
notoriety.
A toss of a coin determined
that Nalstetler would get ·the
" bye" in the finals bracket, and

'

0

0

J

one free practice run, automat!·
cally guaranteeing him at least a
$1,000 payday.
In the finals, Nalstetler went
through the gear sequence \vlth
perfection to get the Jump on his
opponent. NaisteUer held the
edge down the quarter-mile strip
to win at the finish by a fender,
clocking In with a blistering
speed of 120.469 miles per hour.
The win in the Super-Pro
bracket was worth $2,000 to the
Meigs Countlan who said, "I
knew I had a good jump out of the
gate, but then It seemed like ev·
erythlng went In 'slow motion'.
Although we had a super time on

Scoreboard ...

'

NFL results

.,

American Co nference

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ScaUk&gt;
Kan!ltl.ll Chy

San

9 D .351 251 :J09
.7116 .&amp;!! 2'1 1

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Wrst
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7 1 fl
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.Mil 2f"J 2K9
.GOO I!:U 2'2K
.321 229 28M

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.286 IK7 305

.MO 292 ;100

National Confe,tf'Rtt'

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7 7 0
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Atlanta

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division IIIII'

y~Jint.'hi•d t~layuff

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1!:65

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310 :UB
:111 :iU
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.186 · 212 1715

.71-1 :1"1''2 IRS
.2!16 1911 2'29

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San FriUI .

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.. 10 '
I 10 Q ,Z/18 2!1:1 :1!10
Z II! 0 .143 196 29~

Green Bay

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.57 I :1·11 27fl
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LA Ram" 2:1 C 'hl cll~ 3

Saturoay, 1lf' 1~ 10
ln(lunapolls at NV ·11.'1", l 'l::IO p.m.
Phllldf'lpllilllll Phof'nlx, -1 p.m.
8 utll~. Dl'c. 11
K.msa.,. City u.t NV Glanls, I p.m.
Qndnmtl :11 Hou!!lon, I p.m .
Oallwl at \\'~U&gt;Wn~on. I p.m .
Dt'troll at OllcllJto, I p.m.
LA Raldns IAI BuHalo, I p.m .
MlnqoS(Il».u.t GrM'n Bll)' , I J!.M.
TlUUP' Bay"' New En ~and. I p.m .
Allanlllllt LA Rlll11il, I p.1n .
· NrwOrh·ansatSanFriUlcllllt"O . .. p.m.
l'llt!ilu fKIII&amp;I San Dlt'fltO, 4 p.m .
Denver at sea.Uie, II p.m.
Monday , Drt-. 12
CII'Vl'htnd at Miami, 9 p.m .

•
i

••'
'
0

•

'
f

Final UPI
grid ratings
'NE\\' \ 'ORR( l iPII - Th t'Unltf'dPrl'ti!o

T•oun

1. No:all\' Damt&gt; !HI tii ·Ot
2. MI!Ulil [:I) ( 10·11
a. W. Vlrglnht (:ll ( 11· 01
-1 . Florida Slah• (II ( 10·11
5. Soulfwr n Cu.! t 10·11
i. Nrlra.,ka Ul·IJ
7. 1\uhurn (10-ll

'
l

'•

II. t\rbn~o; { 10·11

:
:
:
-

J&gt;olol!o
7U J
6il9 l!
1:15 :1

... '
"" '

1116 !I
159 '7

:160 H

9. UCLA (9·21

:Sili 9

II . Oklah&lt;~ma (B·Zl
II . Mkhiltan (}I·:!· I )
1:!. Oklahoma Stuh• {9·'! )
12. Orm11nn (9-:n

29K Ill
%SK II

U . Hou!ilon (!1·2)
15. Wyoming ( II· I )
IIi, !ilyracu !I' (11·2 1

r

Transactions
Ha!i e hllll
U•lcai(O (NL) - Tradl'd lclt llclder

Rafael P!Umelru and pitc her~; ,J. mlr
MD)IPr and Dr~·w Hull lo Texn~J for
pitt hers Mhtih Wlllhuns, PIWI KHp~.
st.ev.- Wll•on. Infielder Curti.'~ Wllker11on
and 2 minor league player" to he namt&gt;d
later.
Cl~elatld - Slpd p\Wtl er Bud Black
loa one-year contract.
Detroit - Slpd fre e-agee&amp;lnDtldl"r
AI Pe .. lqllf'.
Texas- Traded oudleldl!l' Doh Brower
lo lhe New York Yuken for Mhorhtop
Dahhy Me .cham.

\.

·

Colle~{£'

San DleJO Stalt' - Hlrf'd a.'i&amp;lst.ant
c..-oache11 Barry Lamb, DA\'1' La)· . Bret
btpiJ:.i, CUrtiS Jobnson and AI Tanara;
retained assb&amp;af!l8 Ron Mhm, Sle\o"t&gt;
Oevlnf!, Ed SchmldlandDanUnderwood .
Stanford- l'lrcd football coac h .Jack

lliK U

IIU t:l
'2-1 13
62 u
.. , 16

Ohio Pallet .................................... , 26 22'

Stewart's Gun&amp;: Supplies ............ , ... 24 24
Te am 3........................... .'.... , .......... 14 34
High Team Game -

Blue Tartan-512;

·451: 416.
High Team SerieS - Blue Tartan-1379:
Vaughn's Auto Repalr-1150;
Guq !\ Supplles·1134.

Stewart's

Hlgh Game- Debbie Phelps-227; Dottle
WUH98; DebblePhelr.s·191.
High Series- Debb e Phelps-577· Dottle
Wlll-488; Kathleen Ffyar-428".
'

UPI college
'
cage ratmgs

.

MONDI\Y TRIPLICATI!S
Oet(lber 31, 1988

NEW VORK( UPJJ - Tht"UnttedPr~~~o
tntt&gt;rnaHoMI Ro~t.rd of ·coachi!S' Top '20
colkge tlllliill!lhall ratlnJPi. with flrt~l ·
piau• votes andt't'l'Ord.'i throUJth Dt'c. ~In
puenthes~. IOtal polnb (hMl"d on Hi
polnlsforllrM. plact'. H forM"\.'Ord, l't(' . \
and buot ~ek'11 ran ldn~ :
Point
Teotm
8111 I
I. Dukf' (:1~) (4-0l
561 2
2. Michigan (:n il-01
~:11 :t
:t SyracuMC (61 ('1 -0l

'"':wo

10
:t69 ,

12. Gt'orglaTf'ch (:t-Ol
1:1. florida Stah• t:~O)
U. Loul!!vllle (1·21
15. Ohio 8tatt• t:l-11
16. Teni'M'S!K'(' c:I·Ot
17. VlllanoWl ta-n
18. UCLA (!l-0)
19. Seton Hall (6-0 1

150 It

High Team Game -

:n n

:JJ 20
!2 .,
,

OthC"r!l rc ~ lvlng voU'K: Arkan!IUl·
Ultk· Rock, Color.utoSlllte, Conneclltul.
Florida. Geof'l{la. KIUI.ui Stat I!', LoulMI·
11.na Tt'eh, Loyoi11·Mu.r,YJ11ount, Mll'rnphlll
Stale, Nl'W Mexico, Nord! Carolina·
( :harlotU', Norah Carallra &amp;ate. Notre
Dame, Soulh Carollu, St. Jolm'!!,'Stan· ,
ford, Templf', Tmta!l-EI l"uo, We:st
Vll'&amp;'lnla, Wichita Stale, Xavlt&gt;r (Ohio).

TWIN CITY MACHINE AND WELDING
"YOUR WELDING SUPPLY
AND REPAIR CENTER"

i
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A business insurance pack·
age, that is. It's SERIES
ONE, a broad-coverage.

competitively-priced plan
for retail stores, offices,
churches, apartments and
drug stores. Call us for a
proposal and quotation. ·

i
I ·~!\~
~
J
DRAWING DECEMBER 22ND, 1:00 P.M.
I
~
i
I Twin City Machine and Welding , I

~
~

• CHRISTMAS GIVEAWAY •
STOP IN AND REGISTER TO WIN A
l1NCOlN 225 AMP AC WElDER

W

No Purchase Necessary-Need Not Be Pruent to Win

·•

11 cou'

~92-3768

Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Salt$, 733 Third Avenue,

New York, New York 10017.
POS'IMASTER: Send address changes
to The DaHy Sentinel, W Court St.,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

,. SUBSCRIPTION RATFS
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week .. ,....... .. .......................$1.40
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SubscrJbcn notdP.Sirlng t opay the carrier may remit In advance direct t o
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit wUl be given carrier each
week.
No subscriptions by mall permitted. In
areas where home carrier service is

available.
Mall Subscriptions
Insid e Meigs Count)'
13 Weeks ........... ,...................... $19.24
26 Weeks ........... :....... ... ............ $31.96
52 Weeks ................ .................. 174.36
Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks ......... ,... ..................... $20.80

26 weeks .................................. $40.30
52 Weeks ..... ................... ,......... 175.40

#6 Howard ...... ..................................... 6£

Whaley's Auto Parts ............................62
Jim Cobb Olsb., CadUlac and Chev .. ......59

#3 Kennedy .......................................... 53
Codner Trucking .................................. 46
Aardvark Sounds ................................ .26
High Game -

June Mowery-190; Kay

Osborne-185; COrky Kennedy-177.
High Series - June Mowery-509; Marlene Wtlsm-482; Darlene Tlllls-478.
High Team Game - #3 Kennedy·639;
Whaley's Auto Parts-631: Big Bend Ladles
Aux.-597.
High Team Series - # Kennedy-1798;
Whaley's Auto Parts-1776; #6 Howard·

1752.

TO THE
-·

nts

20..Ort'gon Slalt&gt; (2-0)

Member: United Press 1.nternattonal,
Inland "Daily Pres.sAssocJatlon and the
~lo Newspaper Association. Nat tona l

Ohio Pallet-465:

!Ill J.l
KillS

"1.

Ohio.

TEAM
TOTAL POINTS
Big Bend Ladles AuK . ........ .................. 66

High Team Series - Ohio Pallet-1278:
Blue Tartan·lZ'i'4; Vaughn's Auto Repair·
1177.
High Game - Dottle WUI-164; Paula
Mora-163; Margaret Eynon-159.
High series - Dottle Wlll-473; Debbie
Phelps·449; Paula Mora-423.

11611

3:1

llshlng Company/ M,ulttmedla, Inc.,
Pom.eroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Seco nd ~lass postage paid at Pomeroy,

Blue Tartan-434; -427.

11

7.

through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·

Stewart's Gun &amp; Supplles ................ 26 30
Team 3................ ........................... 20 36

:141 '
207 I

-12

Warren Local at Waterford
South Point at Northwest
Portsmouth at Ashland
Fairland at Hannan Trace
OVCS at Symmes Valley
Meigs- Open
Federal Hocking at Miller
Wellston at Vinton County
. Trimble at Alexander
Belpre at Nelsonville-York

Publ tshOO every afternoon, Monday

Ohio Pallet ..................................... 30 26

:til $

:tu

Tonight's games

(USPS H~9i0)
A Division or Multimedia, Inc.

TEi\M
WL
Blue Tartan .... ......... ... .......... ,......... 40 16
Vaughn's Auto Repair .. ., ........ ...... ... 38 18

.

ii. North CaroUna (11--11
ti. Iowa 1I) ( -1·0)
'2. Oklahoma tt·t 1
!l. Nevad•L~a.-. Vf'KIIIi (2-11
9.1111nol!l (:J.tll
10 . i\rtlo• (Z.ll
11. Ml!i!\CIUrl (5-'21

Keith Nelson.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (69)- Anthony
Raymore. 5-0-10; Jimmy
Kearns, 0·1-1-4; Mike Tidwell.
2·3· 7; Larry Benning. 4·5·13;
Marc Gothard, 0·5·5; Brian Watkins , 0-5-0·15; Brad Schubert,
1-1-0·5; John Lambcke, 5-0-10.
TOTALS 17·7-14-GJI.
SHAWNEE STATE (75) 'Brad Schomaeker, 2-2·0·10; Jay
Jones, 2·1·0-7; Joe Smith, 1·2·2·
10: Brian Williams, 4·3·11; Craig
Allemeier, 2-0-4; Keith Nelson,
5-4·14; Britton Jackson, 9-1·19.
TOTALS 25·5·10·75.

The Daily Sentinel

SKYLINE BOWLING LANES
ALLEY CATS
No-v_. %2, 1988

WL

Vaughn's Auto Repalr .... .. . 1............. 34 14

- - - - - - - - Y:IOIY:101111¥Y:IOI'Illf'!201(1'l::l!!la!lal!IOIY:IOIY:IOIY:IOIY:IOI~.

~
1

MONDI\V TRIPLICATES
October 24, 1988

Blue Tartan .................................... 3612

MIIJU4ry ln!!tlluko- Foothall
coach Eddk• WllllwmiUn rt!!illfled.
Hockf')'
NY hlandl'rll - Sii(I1Cd fre('-IIJIMI
del'en!if'man Rf't&gt;d Lanon.
NY RanRt!l'!ol - lkcldled ~oallt'ndc'r
Mlltt' Richter from Den~r of lntr.rm·
Unnlll Hockey L£1111'11' and left win~ .r~~
Paterson frcm Nf'W Haven of Aml'rlcan
Ho cki'Y Le llKU"·

z-unran lil'd

The potential backyard rivalry
between Rio Grande and Shaw·
nee State got o!f to a blazing start
Monday when Shawnee Intensified its game In the second period
to edge the Redmen 75-69 at Lyne
Center.
Spearheaded by forward Brit·
ton Jackson, the Bears reversed
Rio's 37·34 halftime lead and
forced the hosts to shoot from the
outside, while the Redmen peri·
odlcalty rallied to win back
control of the game.
"Shawnee Is ' very balanced
team, the best team on our
schedule," Rio mentor John
Lawhorn said. "We only played
in spurts. We were not . very
consistent and t hat was
disappointing. •'
Lawhorn felt "we rushed our
three's a little too much," al though those 3-polnt shots, primarily by Brian Watkins in the first
period's opening minutes, helped
Rio move ahead 13·6 at 14: 32.
Jackson and center Craig Aile·
meter helped cut the advantage
to tie a few times and then lead
29·25 at 7:58 on a Joe Smith
3·poblter.
The Bears were ahead 34-25 at
7:37 when the Red men comeback
machine went into play . Defense
shut down Shawnee long enough
for Mike Tidwell to sink two
charity shots at 2:57 to lead 35·34.
Marc Gothard netted another
two at the foul line at 2:23 while
the team held the line against the
Bears until the buzzer.
Jim Arnzen's club, coming off
two weekend victories in the
Malone Tournament (81·64 over
Albion, Mich., and 91·81 over
Malone), soon erased the hosts'
advantage on a Brian Williams
free throw and a 3-point shot bv

the middle to give the Rams a
13-3 ·advantage with 1: 43 remain·
ing in the third quarter.
After EUard's 46-yard catch
and run, Bell raced 32 yards
against the NFL's top rushing
defense to the· Chicago 1. Two
plays later, the tailback leaped
over left tackle for his league·
hes t 16th touchdown.
Bell had 28 carries for 98 yards
Monday night and has 1,058 for
the season. He also went over
1,000 as a rookie with Buffalo In
1984.
Everett completed 17 of 31
passes for 251 yards and one
touchdown and three interceptions. The third· year pro has now
thrown for 3,460 yards. bettering
the previous club record of 3,276
set by Vince Ferragamo in 1983.

Local howling

TEAM

£1Wlol.)' .

~ . Gtoor~town f!·Ol

lnlrrnltlollll Board of Cotu•hi'N Top 20
collrg•• foott"lllll rattnp, with rf'L-Anl und
flrMl·pllll·t' vote~! tn parenlht'H£&gt;!1, lobi
points ( h~t·d on 1ft p oint ~ tor llrHI plac1•,
\ .. for Sf't.'Ond, PIC .), and \iLtlt Wl'Pk'll
r.anldn~

""'

the clock, I could hear his engine
over .mine. 1 remember looking
back at him a couple of times,
then looking back up at the finish
line. It seemed like It (the finiSh
line) was ten miles away, but we
finally made lt." .
Curt's uncle, Mac VanMeter,
engineered the potent 406 small
block Chevy powerplant and
serves as head mechanic on the
team.
·
Nalstetier' s mount ls a gloss
black 1969 Camara 4·speed with a
stock suspension set-up modified
by the crew and supplied' with
traction bars. The duel feed
Holiy car is supplied with CAM-2
Racing gasoline.
The major sponsor Is C&amp;D Penn·
zoll at Five Points, while an auxlll·
ary sponsor Is ALD concrete of
Columbus. Engines are by Mac
VanMeter and parts are supplied
by Rocket Racing Speed and Auto
of Racine.
Nalsletler also recently earned
a trip to the "Nationals" competl·
tlon In Indianapolis, Ind. as a result of bls great showing In the
Buckeye state. He was also points
champion at Mouni Vernon for the
second year In a row, winning the
spring opener and final bracket
championship elimination.
Crew members of the C&amp;D
Racing Team are Ruth Nals·
teller, Ricky Nalstetler, Darin
Roach, Jean VanMeter, and Mac
VanMeter.

Vlr~tlnla

Monda.to•'s Game

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19. (i(&gt;orxtu. 18·31 .•
1:119
!0. !Ul'l Colonulo (8·3)
u z
%0. iu'l'II\Jahama (8·3)
z·unr-anlied
Otheu receiving votes: Arl10na, luwu,
Ml chii(UI Stall', South CD.rollna.

:wo

:131
.6.1:1 2-15 221
.286 Zl!l! :m

~

1

•

T
Pti. PF PI\
:1 0 .186 Zill 199
6 o .ru :ltl ~es1
s o .sn .no 256
1 1 .4f-1 ,.1 :n1

~nll"'.ll

Houston
Clcvl"IMd
Pitlsl:lurgh

3:117

17. Loul!il!lft!l Sl.all' (11-&gt;1)
1 ~. Washington Sta!e IM·31

NA.TIONI\L FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Today in history

...

National Troills Dragway In Columbus recently.

CURT NAISTETLER and his C&amp;i&gt; Pennzoll
Racing Team won the $2,000 Fall ·c luslc at

music. Important newsstands
'90s. If and when It does, the century ought to be the American
around the world now sell three
cultural equation that Is then In Century. It Is George Bush's Job
American dally papers: the
place, will determine who won it. to lead us to another century,
International Herald-Tribune,
Culture counts. That's why different to be sure, but still
the Wall Street Journal, and USA
freedom works. Decades ago American-Inspired.
Today. There Is now a near·
Henry Luce wrote that the 20th
global television news station:
Cable News Network.
There Is, at last, a global
language: American. It Is the
language of "Dallas'' and silly
sit-coms that are due for explosive growthln viewership as
.
By United Press lnternatl!Jnal
much foreign television Is prlvat·
Today
Is
Tuesday,
Dec. 6, the 341stday of1988 with 25 to follow .
!zed and expanded.
The moon is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
Foreign students flock to
The morning star Is Venus. .
American universities. ImmiThe evening stars are Mercur}&gt;, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
grants 'c ome to America; we take
Those
born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
more legal Immigrants than all
Include
England'
s King Henry VI in 1421, French chemist Joseph
other nations put together!
Gay-Lussac
In
1778,
Western movie star Wllllam S. Hartin 1870, poet ·
Democracy Is becoming the
Joyce
Kilmer
In
1886,
lyricist Ira Gershwin in 1896, actress Agnes
system of choice. American
Moorehead
in
1906,jazz
pianist Dave Brubeck in 1920 (age 68), and
polltlcal .consultants peddle 3().
comedian
Wally
Cox
In
1924.
second spots in the strangest
places. Free-market economics
On this date In history:
are touted everywhere.
In 1917, more than 1,600 people died In an explosion when a Belgian
VIsion 1s the primary commod·
relief
ship and a French munitions vessel co111ded in the harbor at
lty In geopolitics today. Before
Halifax,
Nova Scotia.
his death, Germany's Franz
In 1922, the Irish Free State, forerunner of the modern Republic of
Jose! Strauss asked this: How
Ireland,
was officially proclaimed.
·
can you change the world? He
In
1933,
Americans
crowded
Into
liquor
stores, bars.and cafes to buy
answered: Military force Is now
their
!lrst
legal
alcoholic
beverages
in
13
years, following repeal of
unthinkable, revolutions are usu·
Prohibition:
·
ally crushed, but the contest of
In
1941,
President
Franklin
Roosevelt
sent
a
message
to Japanese
ideas Is more potent than ever.
H;lrohlto
expressing
hope
that
gathering
war
clouds
would
Emperor
The pieces of·the global Jigsaw
be
dispelled.
Japan
atbJcked
Pearl
Harbor
the
next
day.
'
puzzle will be scrambled In the
In
1975,
the
U.S.
Senate
authorized
a$2.3
button
emergency
loan
to
turmoil of the '90s. But what wut
save
New
York
City
from
bankruptcy.
the world be like when the pieces
In 1986, President Reagan admitted "mistakes were made" In
come together? II those Amerl·
, can values are safeguarded and execution of the United States' Iran arms pollcy .
extended, then Bush can count
A thought for the day: Poet Joyce Kilmer wrote, "I think that! shall
. himself a success.
never
see a poem lovely as a tree."
The Cold War may end In the

I -

Minnesota. Chicago and the
Vikings - who beat the Bears
Sept. 18 - meet In the regular·
season finale at the Metrodome.
Mike Lansford added first-half
field goals of 25 and '1:1 yards and
a fourth -quarter kick of 22 yards
for Los Angeles. The first two
field goals came as a result of
Chicago turnovers.
Harbaugh, making his first
NFL start, completed justllof30
passes for 108 yards and two
Interceptions. Harbaugh col·
Iected 48 yards on a final drive
that ended with Johnnie Johnson's pickoff with 9 seconds left.
The former Michigan star, In
his second pro season, was
subbing lor inJured quarterbacks
Jim. McMahon and Mike
Tomczak.
. Ellard, who had 6 catches for
132 yards, heat cornerback Mike
Richardson on a slant pattern up

Shawnee State edges
Rio's ·Redmen, 75-69

Bush should face 'vision thing' B~n Wattenberg

works.~'

.. , ...... .-......

· Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear

saMelHING IN

Berry's World

-

ANAHEIM, Calif. .(UP!) Jl!n Everett threw a 31·yard
scoring pass to Henry Ellard In
the third quarter and the Los
AngeleS Rams took advantage of
Inexperienced Chicago quarter·
back Jim Harbaugh Monday
night to keep alive their playoff
hopes with a 23·3. vic tory over the
Bears.
Ellard, who leads the NFL In
receiving yards, added a 46-yard
reception to set up Greg Bell's
1-yard TD run in the fourth
period as the Rams snapped a
fout,game losing streak to lm·
prove to 8·6. They stand one
game behind San Francisco and
New Orleans, which are tied for
first in the NFC West.
The Bears, who managed only
a 39-yard field goal by Kevin
Butler In the second period. fell to
11·3 and had their NFC Central
lead shaved to one , game over

Soft stands will haunt new administration

·The Daily Sentinel
.

LA Rams top Chicago, 23-3

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Midc!leport. Ohio
Tuesday, December 6, 1988'

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

POME~OY, oHIO 1 L.:~:;:.·.::•::u::n=:AU'I0=:..-..1

~c.---!I:IB*I'l::l!llllll~!la!l:tB*fj;l:fS:!!Iafj;l:-------sJt

C &amp; D PENNZOil
RACING TEAM
WINNER OF THE PRESTIGIOUS
"FALL CLASSIC"
AT NATIONAL TRAILS DRAGWAY, COLUMBUS, OHIO
Special thanks To Pit Crew Members Ruth Naistetler, Darin Roach,
Jean VanMeter, Mac VanMeter, Ricky Naistetler, Max VanMeter
, Racing Engines•
· arx
_.,.

DRIVER: CURT NAISTETLER
$2,000 Super
Pro-Bracket Winner:
"Thanks to my sponsor,
C&amp;D Pennzoil, Five
Points, Oh."

•

�The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

·
'

Beat of the bend
'

.•
TUESDAY
: POMEROY -The River Val •ley Herbalists will meet Tues:day, 6:30 p.m .. at Royal Oak
;Resorrt, for a Christmas potluck.
·Members are to bring materials
:to make Christmas pomanders.

United Methodist Church with
Rev. Norman Taylor, evangelist
Donna Wolf will be singing on
Thurdsay and the group, Suprlse,
on Saturday. Services wlll begin
at 7:30 nightly. ,Everyone
welcome.

.

Remember neighbors

inas In Wales to be presented at
Rio Grande College Sunday ,
Nancy Yoacham ha s three
tickets s he needs to sell - give
her a ring at The Sentinel If

r---People in the news-----By IRIS KRASNOW
United Press Internallonal

you're interested.

SLIM PICKINGS: When James Brown performed In a charity concert Sunday, the
self-proclaimed " godfather of soul" drew only
about 350 people. But he claimed no t to, be
disappointed bl' UJe sUm turnout at the Augusta Richmond CivtCtenter In Augusta , Ga . "I don't
cou.nt money. I count blessings, " said the legend
known as "Mr. Cold Sweat ." The concert .was a
court-ordered performance as par t of a plea
agreement on crtmlnal charges that Included
possession of the drug PCP and resisting arrest.
Promoters had hoped to raise about $70,000, but
receipts totaled less than $3,500. Approached by
an apologetic and weeping promoter, Brown
quoted one of his most popular songs. "You feel
good. I feel good. You did the best you could do."
He then drove away In &amp; late-model Lincoln.
HE'S NO SIT-AT-HOME: President-elect
George Bush seems to be as captivated with
HollYwood as his exiting boss . Sunday· night, he
and Barbara Bush were rubbing elbows with Kim
Basinger and Dan Aykroyd at the Clneplex Odeon

-------Thanks, Faye Watson -

you
make It easy for me to keep
smiling.

can Alloy employees and Foote
By BOB HOEFLICH
With the Christmas season Mineral retirees will be held
moving right In, I do want to Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
at the Union Hallin Hartford, W.
mention that
Va. There wlll be no dellverles.
Meigs County
And - Camp 7230 will, be hold
• MIDDLEPORT - A holiday
Infirmary
resiPOMEROY ~ An economic
a
family Christmas dinner also
:luncheon, bazaar and bake sale
dents
will
again
development seminar will be
·will be held Tuesday, from 11 to2,
on
Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the
n
ee
d
to
be
held Thursday, Dec. 8, from 1 tQ
sa49.95*
:at the Middleport Methodist
remembered.
Burlingham
Modern Woodmen
4:30 p.m., at the Me igs Senior
;church. Everyone welcome.
Hall. The camp will furnish
County funds
Citizens Center.
•
turkey, ham , dressing, coffee
do not provide
soft drinks . Members are to
and
: POMEROY -The Meigs Band
for
the
purchase
of
Christmas
FRIDAY
;Boosters will meet Tuesday, 7:30
take
a dlsli and their own table
presents
and
I'm
sure
you
know
GALLIPOLIS - Flame Fel. p.m. In the high school band
Santa will be on hand
sesrvice.
lowship, Gallipolis, will meet that.
STIHI:
there
will be a Christmas
and
:room.
If you as an individual, ouslFriday, 7 p.m .. at the Columbus
and Southern Electric Building, ness person or a member of an program plus a door prize will be
; MIDDLEPORT- The regular
Speaker will be teacher and organization wish to help out In awarded.
meeting of Middleport Masonic _author, Carol Crook, of Akron. some way, just call the infirmary
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will be Tuesj3efore Thanksgiving goes
$999.95*
She and her husband miJ:!ISter the and advise. The number is
day at 7: 30 p:m.
completely out of sight, I did
singles group at the Cathedral of 992-5469.
So far, one party has been want to mention that Mr. and
Tomorrow. Akron.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapscheduled and there are two Mrs. Thomas Ables. Vale St ..
ter 186, Order of the Eastern
POMEROY - The Return caroling groups planning to sing Pomeroy, . had as holiday guests
their granddaughtrer, Carolee
:star, will meet Tuesday at 7:30 Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the · for residents.
Montanez,
a senior at Yale
:Jl.m. at the Chester lodge hall.
The
Infirmary
has
six
men
and
Daughters of the American Re!ITIHL"..........._
Universily,
Connecticut, · and
six
women
res
idents
this
holiday
volution will meet Friday, Dec. 9,
; CHESTER - Chester Council 1 p.m., at the Grace Episcopal season
their grandson, Todd Montanez,
·323, Daughters of America. will Church Parish Ho!lse. The pro,
a junior at Marquettte Univer-~-----. GREAT CHRISTMAS GIFTS!
:meet at 7:30 Tuesday at the hall.
Pam Douthitt of the Tuppers sity In Milwaukee, Wise .
gram will be on'DAR Schools, by
Stihl chain saws have always been worth a lew extra dollars
Mrs. John J . Rose. Hostesses will Plains Emergency Squad re''
in the long run. And now they're worth a few extre dollars in
: POMEROY - The Big Bend
Mrs . Veda Davis, Spring Ave.,
be Mrs. James O'Brien, Mrs. ports that the unit recently held a
your pocket, too.
:ctvitan Club and area Junior George Morris, Mrs. Pearl Mora, very successful fund drive In thE' Pomeroy, long, long such an
NEW ITEMS FOR THE KIDS:
·Ci vi tans will hast parent apprectactive member of the Ladles
Mrs. Clinton Fisher and Mrs. Tuppers Plains area.
Toy
Stihl Saw (Just like Dad's) ................... •15.95
:auon night .at the Meigs High Gerald Powell.
Many generous residents gave Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post
Hand Crafted Wooden Train Set ................... '9~95
;School Cafeteria. New members
donations or mailed a contribu- 39, American Legion, is having a
*Mfg.
Sugg, Aet•il
•of the Meigs, Wahama and
bit
of
a
bad
ttme.
She
is
confined
POMEROY - The Pomeroy tion to the unit, Pam states- and
:Eastern Junior Civitan Clubs will '- Senior Citizens wlll be having squad members extend a big to Mt. Carmel East Hospital In
' be Initiated. There will be a
round and square dancing on thanks. Anyone else Wishing to Columbus. You can send cards to
:junior Clvitan slide presentation,
Friday evening from 8 to 11 p.m. make a contributionmaydosoby room 161.
;refreshments and door prizes, Music by the True Country sending It to the Tuppers Plains
POMEROY
600 EAST MAIN
•according to Sue Maison,
Congratulations to James TeaRamblers. Those at tending Emergency Squad, In care of
992-2094
;president.
ford of Syracuse. Mr. Teaford
should bring snacks. The public Shirley Lyons, Tuppers Plains,
Ohio.
will be observing a birthday
is Invited.
WEDNESDAY
· anniversary Friday - his 80th ..
SYRACUSE-'- Syracuse NazaWhile you're watching the
POMEROY
Evangeline
' rene Church will be In
revival
If you're interested In the
upcoming
Bowl games during
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
.
•Dec. 7-11. Evening services will Star, wlllhaveltsannuallnstalla- the holiday season, you might see presentation of A Child's Christ:be at 7 p.m. Sunday services will tlon of officers on Friday, at 7:30 a familiar face on the armed
;be at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
p.m. Members are urged to forces promotionals which will
at'tend. Refreshments will be be shown at intervals.
: · POMEORY - The Salvation served.
The familiar face with be Spec.
' Army, Pomeroy, will be tak lng
4 David Hawthorne of eastern
: applications for food and toys for
SATURDAY
Meigs County·. David appears In
B. impressive values on a
You can see why our
What's your idea of a great
:christmas on Tuesday and WedPOMEROY - The Belles and
two of the promotionals- on one
varieiy of tremendous
. Club checking account
deal in checking? A ail
•nesday, Dec. 6-7, from 10a.m. to Beaus Western Sq11are Dance he Is descending a cliff via rope.
noon, and 1 to 4 p.m., on both Club will sponsor an open dance Eight takes were required to get
the personalized checks
services! C. no added fees!
package is a great deal.
: days.
at the senior citizens center in a good take on one of the
Sign up today!
you need at no per check
Congratulations' you get
Pomeroy, on Saturday from 8 to promotlonals- so It wasn't easy.
all of this and more with
charge'
; CHESTER - Chester Fire- 11 p.m. Caller will be Dave
The Club checking
/ men's Auxiliary Is having a Stuthard. All western square
Of course, the season brings on
account
Member FDIC
!Christmas party on Wednesday, dancers are Invited. Refreshthe decorating~ and there are a
I at 7 p.m., at the home of Clarice ments will be served. '
package.
lot of nice· ·decorations around
: Allen.
this year.
SUNDAY
Pomeroy. you may have no·
•
POMEROY - The Royal Oak tlced. has several new garlands
• RACINE Graduates of
Dance Club will hold their annual crossing Main St.
:Southern High School who would
Christmas Dance at Royal Oak
And - the season brings the
; be Interested in forming an adult
basketball league should meet at Resort this Sunday, from 7 to 10 home decorating contests. The
p.m. Music will be by Orlando three Rutland garden clubs wlll
Southern Junior High on WednesColumbo.
day, Dec. 7, at 8:30p.m.
hold staging such a contest In
''
that area and we'll fill In the
details for you soon. I assume
: EAST MEIGS - Eastern At- Banquel, dance
' hletic Boosters will meet Wed- . POMEROY - The annual that some of the other communi:nesday , 7:30 p.m ., In the high JayMar Golf awards banquet
ties will also be having home
and
dance
wlll
be
held
Sunday,
decorating
competltj_ons.
:school cafeteria.
'
Dec. 11, at the Eagles Club.
And the season brings on the
:: POMEROY -Pomeroy Lodge Social hour will start at 6 p.m .,
followed
by
dinner
at
6:30
and
a
holiday dinners.
·
;164 will hold its monthly meeting
•on Wednesday, 7:30p.m., at the dance at 8. Tickets are on sale
Christmas dinner for Amerl;Middleport Temple. Open lnstal- now for $25 a couple or $13 single.
: lation of new officers for the Reservations· must be made in
advance. T(ckets may be pur·coming year will be held. Rechased from Nancy Hlll, Sandy
; (reshments will be served.
National
lannarelll or Bob Freed.
A Christmas bazaar will be
. HARRISONVILLE - A speheld Thursday at the Senior
Discount Program
Collecting clothing
~cl al missionary service at HarrlCitizens Center, 9:30a.m to3p.m.
featuring over
POMEROY ~ The Meigs In conjunction with the bazaar a
•sonvllle Holiness Chapel wlll be
$2,501) in moneybake sale will be held.
:wednesday , 7:30p.m., with Rev. County Ministerial Association
saving coupons
: Guy Troyer. Rev . Da vld Ferrell, will once again be collecting good
warm, clean outer clothing for
:Pastor, Invites everyone.
dlstribu
lion to those who need it.
••
531 JACKSIJ4
•'
THURSDAY'
The association wlll be collectPIKE
RT.lS WEST
:: ROCK SPRINGS Rock Ing the clothing during De: springs Grange wlll meet Thurs- cember and it will be distributed
during January. The clothing
~day, Dec. 8, 6: 30 p.m., for a
;potluck dinner. Members should wlll be distributed by the Cooper•!&gt;ring non-perishable food ative Methodist Parish Headquarters on Condor St., in
: items.
CatrJ
Pomeroy .
••
Protection
To contribute clothing resi• ' POMEROY - A bake and yard
Service
; sale wlll be held Thursday and dents may contact either the
•trlday, from 9 a.m. to4p.m.,and Rev. Richard H. Freeman,
::Saturday, from 9 a .m. to 12 noon. 992-3172, office, or at his home
;at the senior citizens center In 992-6818, or the Rev. Melvin
•Pagetown. Proceeds will go to Franklin, 992-3317. ·
: the Carleton Church.
'
· Key Ring and
· Registration Service
: : LONG BOTTOM - Revival
Emergency Cash
:services will begin Thursday and
•continue each evening through
Advance Service
:sunday at the . Long Bottom
AccidenUII
Death
~.Tops
Insurance

Ask Santa lor

aS

$199.95

•

om

JOB'S DAUGHTERS QUEENS IN PARADEInternational Order ot Job's Daughters meet
regularly in Middleport and honored queens from

•

Holiday decorations Including
wreaths made from natural
materials by- Pearl Canaday
were featured at the recent
meeting of the Rutland Garden
Club held at the home of Neva
Nicholson.
Mrs. Canaday noted that a
straw wreath makes a good base
for holiday wreaths. She said that
when using pine cones It is best to
have ones which are uniform In
size. Members displayed a varIety of wreaths.
.
· An article on Ohio Buckeyes
was given by Stella Atkins who
talked about the name noting
that when the buckeye Is dives ted
of Its shuck, the nuts are a rich
brown and shine resembling the
eye of a male deer. Dorothy
Woodard passed around buckeyes from the tree In her yard.
Fall fertilizers were discussed
by Ruby Diehl who suggested
that fertilizer high In nitrogen
should not be used after July 1.
She suggested applying fertilizer
after the leaves have fallen but
before the ground freezes.
Pauline Atkins's article was on
evergreens and pinecones and
she displayed 12 different kind~
of evergreensasklngmembers to
identify each one. She also had a

the local chapler look part in Monday night's
Middleport Christmas parade.

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

--------

.

You'll get a great deal with The Club!

:12

.
.

Bazaar slated

.

I

l

FALL SPECIALS

.

club
'!flarty held

: ; Annual Christmas party of
; 'o hio Tops Club 570 wlll be held
•Dec. 13 at the Coonhunters
:building on the Rock Springs
•: fairgrounds.
for the party were made
....•'•'at Plans
Tuesday night' s meeting con:. dueled . by Lennie B. Aleshli'e,
·; leader. Weigh-I n will be from 5 to
•:6 p.m. with a covered dish dinner
"'Ill be served at 7 p.m. There will
:be a Christmas queen announced
:.that night. Members will ex:~.change gifts. there will be a gift
•. .exchange by secret .pals, and new
'" names will be drawn for 1989.
;!: Mary Martin was the top loser
·: with Bernice Durst being the
;runner-up and also winner of the
•fruit basket.
: At the next meeting Peggy
~~lnlng's team will put on a skit.

.

BRAKES
AS LOW AS $3995 FRONT $3775 REIRI

Adult class
partj/ held

Members of the Rulland TOPS
The adu It class of the Rock
Club celebrated a no-giiln week
Springs Chu rch went to Dales in
over Thanksgiving resulting In
Gallipolis Sunday evening for a · each one being paid a quarter for
Christmas dinner party.
each pound lost .
The Rev. Melvin Franklin had
A new contest will begin this
table grace. Others attending
week when plans will also be
Bill and Louise Radford, Jenny
made for the annual Christmas
and Robert Burdette, Avery and
party. Meetings are held eac h
Helena Geoj:lein. Nancy and Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the AmeriRollin Radford, Frances Goe- can Legion hall on Beech Grove
glei n, Ann Mash, Mildred and Road In Ru !land. Further inCllf! Jacobs, Pearl and Thor formtion may obtained_bycalllng
· Casey,, Roger Watkins, Betty 742 2847.
.
Weyersmiller. Arland and Marth a King. Violet Hysell, Dorothy
Jeffers. Mary Showalter, Fern
Morrjs and Betty Will.

Thanksgiving guests
Guests of Mrs. Freda Smith for
Thanksg iving were )'llr. and Mrs.
Larry Stanley and daughter,

!

~
w
-~

882-2135

MASON

. 773-5514

•

OPIN DAILY 9 Ul-5 PM
SUNDAY 1 PM·S PM

THAT'S
NEW
EVERY
DAY

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
992-5776-SYUCUSE, OH.

Store.
VISIT WITH SANTA....
Bring your camera or
for $3.00 we will take
a picture for you.
SANTA WILL BE HERE....
Tues., Dec. 6-7-8:30
Tues. Dec. 13-7-8:30
Sun., Dec. 17-2:.00-4:00
Tues., Dec. 20-7·8:30

'II
'II

POINT PLEASANT
675·1121

•POINSETTIAS • POINSETTIA
HANGING BASKETS •HOLLY TREES
•AFA ICAN V 10 LETS •FO UAGE
PlANTS &amp; BASKETS •MONUMENT
SPRAYS
•CEMETERY VASES
•WREATHS and GRAVE BLANKETS
•LIVE &amp; CUT CHRISTMAS TREES

Claus Will
Be At Our

V1

F.D.I.C.

HOSPITAL ·

Now Open For The
Christmas Season.

Santa

'II

IIEIIBER

VALLEY

'

MEIGS FU , NITURE

'6

NEW' HAVEN

Valley Drive. Point Pleuant. W.Va. 25S50

No Punha11 NHistary-NIId Not II Present to Win.

w

.71

PEoPLES BANK

OUR SCHEDUU IS UMIIED••• CAU NOW
949-3060

STOP IN SOON AND REGISTER FOR A FREE
RECUNER TO BE GIVEN AWAY. DRAWING
WILL BE HELD ON DECEMBER 23, 1988.

'il

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED:..EIUII'IEI:tl
NIASE ~.,;
LICENSED SHOP

lltr£ASANT

,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~-~~~--~~-~

ELECTRONIC ENGINE ANALYSIS

S3895 6 CY. $3495 4 CYL $2

"Late Comers Can Make Up Work 1'

Anna
of atEdison.
Anna
is ina
fresh~ an
Otterbein
College
Weslervill e. Also vis iting were
Mr. and Mr s. Reece Prather and L.o2:;B:;0::.,:3;:R::D;,;S:,:T~,_________.;;I;;A;,;;C;;.;IN;;.;E;,;•.oO;,;H;;.;I;,;;O-_,
son. Tha.ron of Kei terlng.
•
. ..

~

TUNE-UPS

.

}

(304) 675-6015

"FREE" RECLINER

ROTORS TURNED EXTRA

$1500

Dr.Ayers

. Clau01 will contlnu1 after Christmas.
D«othy Blntz-Pr•lo• •-riot Studios

TOPS OH 1456
class meets

11

OTHERS SLIGHTY HIGHER

8 CYL.

the float were churchmembers, who were
assisted In their singing by Rev . and Mrs. James
Keesee, who were at the rear of the float.

THE REASON FOR THE SEASON - This
float , sponsored by VIctory Baptist Church,
Middleport, spread lhe word that "Jesus Is the
Reason for the Season." Christmas carolers on

large assortment of pine cones.
•
She di splayed an arrangement
using evergreen, . pine cones and
red Christmas tree ornamen ts
and gave tips on decorating with
pine.
Mrs. Nicholson had devotions
Edward
reading Psalms 121 and a birth·
day verse by Helen Steiner Rice.
For roll call members answered
by naming a natural material
they had saved . The civic comPediatrics &amp;
mittee reported that Mrs. CanaInternal Medicihe
day had donated a red maple tree
and . that she, Stella Atkins, and
Pauline Atkins had done a
Suite 12
planting at the Harrisonville
Pleasant Valley Hospital
school.
Medical Office Building
Mrs . Canaday, Ann Elizabeth
Turner, Mrs. Nicholson, and
. Valley Drive
Stella Atkins, toured Stahl's
Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550
Nursery at Hockingport.
Mrs. Canaday. Mrs. Woodard,
Stella Atkins. Pauline· Atkins, ,
and Ruby Diehl attended the
Office Hours
Pomet'Ciy Flower Shop. Mrs .
Monday through Friday
Canaday, Eva Robson, Mrs.
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Turner. Pauline Atkins, Binda
Dhehl. Mrs. Nlcholsori, Ruby
Diehl, and Marcia ·Denison fu rNew Patients Welcome
nished arrangments for
churches this past month .
The traveling prize was fur,
nished by Eva Robson with
Bernice Nelson as the winner.

CROCHO CLASSES WILL BEGIN
TUESDAY, DEC. 6TH
7 P.M.-9 P.M. AND THURSDAY,
DEC. 8TH 1 P.M.-3 P.M. .

I

..

..

Theater In Washington for a private screening of
" My Stepmother Is An Alien", a Jerry Welnlraub
production. Monday night the Bushes were
scheduled to join Arnold Schwarzenegr;er and
Danny DeVIIo for the world prem lereof Universal
Pictures comedy , " TWIINS" at the Kennedy
Center as a benefit for Special Olympics.
Washingtonians can expect to see the Bvshes at
major cultural events outside the film community. "We love ballet and opera," Barbara Bush
told UPL.
A NEW BALLGAME : Ten nis ace Bjorn Bo~g.
the feisty Scandanavlan who retired from the
courts In 1982 at age 26, now has his sights on
winning over the U.S. menswear Industry . His
Bjorn Borg Design Group USA that premieres In
January features a diverse menswear coUection
to be sold in up~cale departmellt stores. Pieces
run the gamut from cas ual sportswear to suits to
shoes. "Today Europea ns know me more as a
buslnessman-enter preneur," Borg said. "Americans still think of m e as a world-class tennis
player, but will soon recognize me as a
businessman as welL I strongly believe In· the
wlnnnlng formula - success breeds success."

Rutland Garden Club meets

$329.95

f

The Daily Sentinai-Page-6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, DeCember 6. 1988
Page-4

.·

Community calendar

Tuesday, December 6, 1988

I
'ii

The Dail Sentinel

!

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V1
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W·
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V1

.

. 786 N. 2nd, MIDDLEPO.RT

W

~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~-~~~~~---~~-~~~----~~

,I

,,

.,

�The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Tuesday, December 6, 1988

Ohio

Page-6-The

iness Services

Sentinel

Classifie
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
y
POLICIES
'Ad1 outtlide Meigs, Gellie or Meson counties must be prepaid.

"ReceNe 1 .50 discount for ads paid In advance.
'Free ads - GN .. way and Found ads under 15 words will be

run 3 dBV• at no charge.
'Price of ad for all c-.,hellllters is double price of ad ~ott.
'7 point lin e type only lfllld.

Three of our best·

•sentinel is not responsible tor enors after fir1t dll'( . IChedl
tor trrofl first d., ad runt ln paper) . Call before 2:00p.m .
d8¥ after publicllfion to mike cor'rectkin.
'Ads thM must be p1id In tdlttnce ere
Card of Thanks
Happ'f Adt
In Memo, lam
Yard Sales

.

•A clauified adltertiseniCmt placed In The Dally Sen tinel (e• ·

recliners on sale now!

ca,t - , r:l•slliod display, Busin•• Card and legal not ices)
willnl\lo appear in the Pt . Pleasant Regi1ter and the Galli·
poll• Daily Tribune, reaching over 18.000 homes.

COPY DEADLINE DAY BEFORE PUBliCATION
MONDAY PAPER
- 11 '00 A.M. SATURDAY
- 2 :0 0P .M . MONDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
- 2:0'0 P.M . TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPER
1"HURSDAY PAPER
- 2'00 P.M. WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY PAPER
- 2,00 P.M. THURSDAY

A.

. SUNDAY PAPER

2

-

In Memoriam

In Loving

Memory

Of

LUCY A.
McKINNEY

who passed away
December 6, 1986.
We're s~ting here filled
with erial,
Bat still there·s a creal
feelinc of relief.
We know you're in Heaven,
and not ·in pain,
And we prom1se you that
we·ll meet aaain.
We'll walk on streets that
.-e pure ~old,
Where !heres no misery,
and no one crows old.
We'll walk hand in hand by
Jesus' place,
And know we were saved by
His arace.
So, be patient, and enjoy
the view,
And someday we'll bethera
with you.
Sadly missed and loved
by her husband, children.
crandchildren.._fantily
and niendS.

\

2 :00P.M. FRIDAY

RATES
15-2&amp; WORDS
$4.00
$5.00
u .oo
$8 .00
$8 .00
$t3 .00
S13.00
821 .00
$33.00
$51 .00

0 -15 WORDS

-1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

Me igs Cauntv

446-Gelllpolit
367-Chethife
388-Vinton
246 - Rio Grande
266-Guyan Ol1t
643-Arebl• Di1t
379-W.. nut

992- Middleport
Pamtfo'/
985 -Chnter
843 - Portltnd
247- larert F1ll1
949- Reclne
742-Rutland
167- Cootvlle

ArnCude614

County, Columbia Town·
tllip, Section• 32, 33, ond
34: Moig1 County, Solem
Townthip, Fraction 36. ond
Soctlona 29, 30, 34, 36, and
36; Vinton County, Vinton

Townahp. Section• 1. 2, 3,
4 , 7 , B,13 end 19, Fractions
1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 12, 13; Vinton
County, Wilknville Townlhip, Silctlone 4. 5 , B, 10,
11. 12, 17, 18, 23, 24.The

propoaad unaargrouno m.n

ing .... encomp•• 10,063
aae~. end •• k»eat8d on the
Mulga Vol• Millo end W111181-

vllle7'h minu18U. S.G.S. quadnonglo mopo. approximatoly
1A north to 6¥2 mllea north of

mined.
The application is on file at
tho oflicee of the Meigl
County Recorder, Mtllll

County Court Hou•. Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 ond
tho VInton
County Recorder. Vinton
County Court Houle, Main
Street,
McArthur, Ohio
45661 for public viewing.
Written com menta end/ or
raquei:ts for an lnfonnal

conference may be: 1ent to

the Oivl1ion of Rociomotlon,
Fountain Square. Building B-3, Columbuo. Ohio
43224, w~hln 30 doy1 of
the loet dote of publication

of this notice.
111116. 22, 29: 11218. 4tc

Between 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or Lea"'

BISSELL
BUILDERS
"At

Notice

HOME BAKED
GOODIES

c.

G8 t Your
Holiday Goodie
Orders In Now.
AUNT TE'S

',

992 •5119
TERRI

SYRACUSE, OHIO
Moot Foreign and
oameotic Vehicles

OHIO

614-662-3821

A/ C Service

a.

All Major
Minor
Repolro
NIASE Certified Mechenic

CALL 992-6756

Prob•te Court

Sarvica on All

WANTED

DEAD OR AUVE

can repair and recore radiators
and
heater cores. We can
also acid bail and rod

·•Washers •D ryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Musl Be Ropoiroblo"

We also

~=~==~~~~ 1·,
DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992·3410

A. "Liberty" Transitional
Recllna-Rocke~ Recliner
Casually styled, but luxur~ously tufted.
Featuring a large head roll, deeply
cu~hioned seat and plush, padded arms.

L1 MESTO NE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
SALE!

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

$279

OWNER:

Man·sized for comfort. yet softly styl ed
woth extra padding in the rolled arms
and a plush button -tufted diamond back.

·

COIIIIERCIAL

.CUITOM KJTCHENI. IATHI
•EXTENSIVE REMODELING
tVIN't'L SIDING. ROOANG
•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUIINO. APT. PROJECTS

SALE!

SINCE l969
DIISn n. S11AQISI

$329

992-7611

,

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196

ALARM
SYSTEMS

SALE!

•Residential
•Commercial

$399

10 Years Experience

HUNTER
SECURITY

MASON

FURNITURE
COMPANY
2nd Sfreet ...
Mason, WV .

(304) 773-5592

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTEIIOR-EITEIIOR
FRJ;E ESTIMATES
Take tho pain out of

paintl,. t.et m• do

YER~ .;;::;ABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

614-992-5952

Spttchu,
Computer Graphics,
Publk ltlatloM,
Advll'tising

~

-~

Ph-:

614 -992-3643

11-71 mo.

Featuring : ConoolidaJed, Outeh
West, Bru.ico, Ashley
LOWEST PRICES

698-6121

MAXIMUM .
DIAMmR 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

111 Woof S.C¥ P-ay

J&amp;L
INSULATION ,

YOUNG'S

12-5-88-1 mo.

DRIVElED

-Addo 1 end remodeUng

Roofing

tnd gutter work
-Con
ork
- Plumbing
electricel

Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

(FII EE ESTIMATESI

-Roo

Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows

92 :z'a7t7es2

Fr"·.:E stl:m
Call ll

-work

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

TRADING

614·992-7301

POST

Referencee

GENERAl CONTRACTORS
1 1-16-'88-tfn

Shop
Where
Santa

·

Shops!

RIVERINE ANTIQUES

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Fiahing Sur:oplio~

GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here

"IUSINESS PIIONE
(6141 992-6550
IISIDENCE PHONE
16141

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

·n11u1y 1, t919

985-4141

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

Middleport, Ohio 45760

RACINE, OHIO

D. J.'S

POMEIOY I OHIO

PLUMBING
HEA
161 North St&lt;ond

RACINE
GUN CLUB

10% Dawn
With Approvetl Credit
No Paymonl ar lntertst

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

HUDNAlL
&amp;
nNG :

1:00 P.M.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Naw llaNot luHt
"Free Eotlmetes"

PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949·2160
NO .SUNDAY CAllS

l-ll·tfn

..The Gifts That Never

1124 E. MAI!II

-

Chlhu...,l, mol,. puppy,

approllll . 9 wkl. old. Cell 814-

445-3398.

Mixed breed puppitl. 2 montht

old. 614-992-6591

Pupplee to glvNWey. %

Bord~r

2 twin st.r:e mattreu. 304-882·
3104.
115 pen11 of old window gl•l-

oppoo• 32" bv 32". Coli 304895-3041 oft.- 8,oo PM.

742·2135

ll-3-'BB-I.mo.

CONSTRUCTION

1,

VInton

lost

OwnerS. Operator,
Tony Cardillo

11 -9-1 mo.

Send resume to: Box Cia 183.
c1 oGolllpol~ Dolly Trlllu n,. 821
Third Ave.. Glllipolil, Olllo
45831 .
Govtl'nment Jol». •11,040 •
*&amp;9, 230 yr. Now ,.ing. Cell
1. 8Qfi-B87- IOOO

for

•t. R -9805

rrent ftd.-81 net

cu
·
' JOIHUNTING7NEEDASKIU1
WE TRAIN PEOPLE FOR JOBS
AS Auto Mechanlct, Cerptnt
CosmatokJgilrt 1 Olv. .l,;:· Medlcet Workeri. EleetrlFood S.VIca WOrk..._

: clan•

1' Elact~onfm Technlcl.,a. lnc*lli, trill Malnt.,. 1 nce Worken,
1
Nurtlng A1111tent1 .,d Orderu
Mlichlnllts Office Work. .
e:t Weld.._ Aegftt• now for
beginning January 3rd.
Call Tri--Coumv Vocation.! Adult
Cent• at 753-3&amp;11 ec.t. 14. A
veriery of tJ nc:Ung 1ourc. to ..V
tor training •• IIVelabl• for
eligible.

d•••

tho••

LACK THE SKILlS? NEED A
JOB?Wetraln peoplefor ;ot.es
mac:hln611sln ourmiChlnetichnalogv progr.-n. Ne•ty INfllfY
procklct of lnci.llltry. from cor?'
toturblnea, llm,pdeeltwl'
ualng machine tooll or u1ing
'mechln• made with m.:hlne

fl'*•

tooll.lnthemactvneteehno~av

progr.T. yau wdl l••n how tD
use v1rlou1 tYPII ofmiChln_,
auch •: hfhe. drll pr. .. mining
machlna grinding machine Md
punch pr... We h•e ·a varitty
af ll rtllng aoui'CM IN Ill able tor
ellglbleiiPpl...tL COithtAdu•
Education Center· Tri·Cou nty
JVS • 7153-31111 •&lt; 14.
Wlnt• quart• bltglns Januery
3rd.
10 ladl• nB8dad for m~..,mne
work. Must read wei; 2 ahlft1
ovailolole; g,oo om-2,30 om:
4'0().9,00 pm. Goad hauoly .
weg~ peiid weeldr; IPPirr after
10:00 am Thurtdl¥. Dec. 1 It
104Y.. 1up1talral M•ln St.,
Pomeroy.

and Found
AVONall•-11 Shirt'¥' Spe••·

LOST' All CIXInty Bond Hot,
white • burgundy. Laet dow,..
town door of p•edo. Coli 81._
388-9780 lift• 4 PM.

~04-875-1429.

Ple•ant verier Nurtlng Care

Cent• 1a 1eeklng ncan ..d
Prectlcal Nura• for lrnmecl•e
'"'Pio\'ment, II lnl-ed coli
304-875-4340, AA-EO E.

Manegemtnt PotltlonA,.hblt.
*18, ooo. oo tlO.OOO. OO. depending on
quallfic:Cione, ec.perlance .,d
perbmenc». Sand ,_.me to
P.O. lwr; 171. Potnt Ple•ant.
W. Vo . 26180.

••hrv

FOUNDblod&lt; fomolopuponRI.
82 top of Deed M.,• curw. call
30 ... 171-2377.
FOUND 1man Collie dog Seturd.y·Wt north Point PI8Ment •ea.
30,...675-3004 or 1711-1839.

12

Situations
Wanted

Yard. Sale

-------Giilliiiolis ___ ------&amp;Vicinity
Moving Sol,.12-l "'"' 12-t2.

New range, w • D. lfv. It
bei*oom a~lt•. gune.. tooll.
lldd. .. con 11,...21&amp;-1181.

8

Public Sale
S. Auction

Loving c•e far .._lv Md
lwldl""'p... 1eoo ~·· con
61 ... 992-8873.

We hare room for 3 etdwty
peraont in ou,r pnOntl o•e
Approved. COII81,._9821115.
.

""me.

16

Schools

Instruction
RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLlEGE, 829 Jooklon Plko.
Coll4411-438 7. Reg. No. as. t 110188.

TOP CASH pold lor '83 modll
end ntwer uted c .... Smith
Bulck· PDntlac, 1111 Ea ..•n
Avo .. Oolllpolll. Coli 81,...4452282.
.
CompJtlte houarlhaldl of lun6ture 6 .ntkluM. Alao wood 8t
eo81 ....... &amp;waln•s Famllur~~
!o Auction. Third • OilY,.
814-44S.3t59.

18

F.,.niture and appllenoea b¥ the
piece or entire houMhold. Felr
being pol d. COII614-441-

!jj;,

Wanted to Buv-Oid CW~nlngJ ..•.
unu.uel n.n• &amp;llba. EtpecleiiV
wide-mouth bkJe j.,., C.ll 814-

245-9328.
U.ed llrnlfure bV the place or
entire household elao 1eUing.
I t ... 742-2415.

Help Wanted

UP TO 115 HOUR PRoCESS·
lNG MAIL WEEKLY CHECK
GUARANTEED, FREE DETAILS. WRITE: SO. 1057 W.
,Pllll.,olphlo. Suho239-GO, Ont•lo. C.Hf 91782.
- -dmo bobotoltt• for 4yr. olcl
Muot be ololt to worl1 - ' \ '
weektndi.WMing.S..dl.tt•
a ref. to: At. 1 ,1011 701.
Nortlup, Olllo 480BB.

•

Wanted

to Do

Col&lt;• by RheL Coli 814-3858444.
WHI bat1(alt In my home wMic
deys for 3 yr. aldl • 4 yr. oldl.
Cell 814-441-4048.

Junk C.n wfth or wfthout
motors. Call llrry Uvef¥· 814388-9301

11

388-8746

Babyattt• needed \tll'eek*ta In
our home. Holzw H~pJtel • •·

AVON· All ariM. Clll Marilyn
We•• 304-182-28ts.

Formerly Meigs Excavating

Rt.

The Glllla County ASCI Offt01
will eccep1 appll&lt;*ilont for
temporary ~rt-tlma hlllp. AppiiCIUona wll be accept_. tOm
8:00 AM to • =30 PM on
December 9, 18888tthemunty
ofllco locotod .. 529 Joclcton
Pike. Room 308-A. Gellpo....
Ohio.

Pickup load broken blockl Md Am.-lal"&amp; Pom•oy h• lmm&amp;bricb. 3408 Fr•kln Ave, Pt. · di.te openlnga for till time 1nd
Ptt.
p ..t-time RN '1 • LPN"s. AI
thlfll. Fle~tlbla achecllllng. com1 piece c•ptrt. IYIIivel r81Jin•. petitive HI.V and beneftt1 of·
30 ... 875-2408.
.
f•ed. Where continuing -..~
tlon ilaptus. Contectl.aRueH•.
lpuppl•, 4m ... lr!d2,...,..&amp;•. RN-DON. Am•I• ..Pom•oy.
mother ful blooded Beagle. 38769 AOcklpriniJI Ad., Pom ..
30 ... 895-3335.
rar. 81,...992-11801.

[ llllii11VImlll
SWill: I! s

Full Excavating and Construction
Re1ldential &amp; Commercial
Free Estimates for Residential &amp;
Farm Work

••

dog"""'"·

992-2526

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthday•. Holldeye

lt. 1, ... 116, Vllltolt

.

CUPBOARDS
BEDS
PIE SAFES
PRIMITIVES

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND

cekee

1

BOOKCASES
CROCKS
WASHSTANDS
DRESERS
LAMPS

JUST OPENED
CAKES
by Donna
Specializing In ,
chll'ecter •nd novelty

·

Young mothlf' Dobermen plus
her two motnth old puppiM &amp;
COII814-441-944t .

CHESTER, OHIO

I

EVERY SUNDAY

C. . t Flnond..

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
. Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY

11-14-'88-tln

Give.,.., outlldeklttens-would
make good Chrlatme1 pr•111t1.
Unda Jonilt. 614-448- n41
after 5 PM.

MARCUM CONTRACTING

TO

992-6461

Pomeroy, Ohio

GUN SHOOT

NOW
PAY
LATER

-

$14 PER TON

CARPENTER
ERVICE

Mastic &amp; Certainteed'
Vinyl Siding

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ .Licensed Clinical Audiologist
X (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
:it 417 Second AVIIIUe, BOx 1213

CERTIFICATES

DESIGNEI BOUTIQUE

Giveaway

Jb::~=~~~;f;~;;~=t:=~==1i7
Listening Devices

GREAT PIICIS - GIFr

11-19-'18 I mo. d.

WE TRADE

CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 1431

H... 5nUNG &amp; TANNIIG
GlUT a.ISTMAS GmS

992-6720

Letta M..Murj.hey
FrH·Lanca Wrlt1r
.

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

Dependable Hearillg Aid. Sales &amp;
CJ ·Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

IU-1 ..4 pd.

'

Parts

FASIIONS,

AIID

4

Service~;·~~:.~:~~

•12 Years Experience

lATEST
JR. &amp; MISSY

614-985-4180

We

SERVICE ,
985 •3561

WOOD STOVES

3-40- •• lin

TOP OF THE STAIRS

We win haul coal for em•oenev
HEAP. Melp ·coumv Dept. of
Human SIWVk:el. end HEAP
vouchers. We can give you
prompt delivwl•· E.:-'•lor Salt
Works.. Inc. Pom•oy. Ohio.
81 ... 992-389t .
·
Need a Mast•c.d-VIae In I
hurry? Guarantaed program r•
garcft . . of hlltory. For mii'IUIII
and application C811 Us. 1· 316733-1083 Ext. M2768.
•
Sl
E ~n...
U·Haul 1 For Ran~. d•• qu..,.
ment Co. U.S. Rt. 36. Hender1on.WV.

:=::::::. . .:::;::::;:~1-:13:-t~fc~~~~=:~~~;:=;j6

Midd...rt, Ohio
992-6611 -

t/20/tflll ..... pL

KEN'S APPUANCE

repair Gas Tanks.

5-25-tfn

11-21-88-tfn

C. 'The Avenger" Contemporary
Recllna-Rocke~ Recliner
Clean -lined and big on comfort. Woth a
three -tier bustle back design. deep back
pillpws. padded arm s, T-cushoon seat.

I. IOUSH

GENERAL
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAl

,.~

'' '•'

B. 'Triumph" Transitional
Recllna-Rocke~ Recliner

GIEG

"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Licensed Shop

12 4 East of Rutland

fNI.,

Collie. 614·247-4024, 614247-2113.

SER~ICE

out radiators.

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

AtrO.s Happy Hollow Rd.
Ph. 61&amp;-742·2355

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Sorvice Cont.- lor Ryan
Products

Wo Honor

We

6, 13, 20. 3tc

&amp;

Modern Gun
ies
Guns • Ammo • Sugs •
22 Ammo -

YARDMAN- ECHO
Located
l
bo!Ween
Rt. Ha~t;:::han.
1 flo

8 .7 Financing on

F1r111 E,alplllellt

Briglll • Stratton
Tecumaeh
Weed Eater
Homollte
J•coblen

Munlelocoding~its

DM~Ier lor

,.,.. &amp; Soro•l••

Authorized Servico

MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES

PH. 949·2969

EAST

Authorized John
Deere. Now Hoiland,
Bush Hog Form •
Equipment Dealer

SMALL ENG.'NE
REPAIR

Alii

SMALL ENGINE

SALES &amp; SERVICE
GUYSVILLE,

.w.,

Pupplee. male 8t femelt. sm.tl
breed. 7wlcs. old. Cell814-4460618.

EAGLE RIDGE

Middleport, Ohio

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
LOADING

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

BOGGS

Business Services
. VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

Oh.
11-21-'BB-1 mo.

319 So. 2nd Ave.
'!'iddleport, Ohio

U. S! RT. 50

In Memoriam

742-2421
Smilh Run Rd. Rutlind,

or Res. 949·2860
CALLS

2

t.-lo, CALIF 91782.

3 Announcements

992-6282

NO SUNDAY

Announce men Is

DtL Jl, 1911,

tnct WI wHIIN open on Su~
doy1 from 1 to 5 p.m. tf.-u

PH. 949·2801
Day or Night

Up to t15 hour proC*IIngmll

Christmas Selections.
Far ye~~r shopping conwtfti,.

CARTER'S

Reasonable Prices"

Be..,tySelon openlng1oonln Pt.
Ple•.m • •· Hair Ryllft • •
oweded. For In lor. C.II30._87S.
20b5.

weelct,o. Check guarenteed. tr•
ct.tai11, write ID 1057 W.

In memory of Mother and
Father: Helen Glmorefrye. who
p-ed
December 22.
1981 end Earl Frye, who ~sed
November 29, 1979.
Gone from our lives. onee to
d. .; But In Our he.-ts, atwayt
ne.. Connie and Herb Outch.end Famlty.

A

PROBATE COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF
ROBERT C. OLIVER, SR .,
DECEASED
CaooNumber 211080
Dockot N. Page 70
NOTICE
. (O.R.C . 2129.021
To All Crod~ore of
auch Decedent:
Notice'' h•eby given that
on the 28th doy of November, 1988, Robert c. Oliver.
Jr., ond Jone F. Oliver, CoExocu1ora of tlje EttAoto of
Robort C. Oliver, Sr .. D•
ce•od. leto of the Cllv
Wlnch•tor, lndlono. filed In
thl1 Court on ,oulhentlcetod
copy of the lottoro of their
oppointmont granted
to
lhem by Tho Circuit Court of
Rondolph County, lndiono.
All crediton of auch decedent muat pre8ent their
clolmo. to thlt Coun. within
llix 1111 montht. after tho data
of ouch filing. or thoir ololma
wMI be forever borrod 01 a
po1tlble lion upon the Ohio
reel Mtate of 1uch decedent.
Robert E. Buck. Judge
(121

·AT

Come see our

CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Towntltip ond Moigo County,
Columbia TownoNp lno. Tho
..,pUcetion P"CIH I
to • pend lhe • - for room ond
pill• und•vround mining.
provide f..- pi• ftllttCJ\/III on
ttto.e ~ ..d .,_ prevloully apprO\IIId to be mined, to
expand • - to be mined II¥
longwall methodl lnd • pr..ioully apprO\IIId to be

WELCOME TO
CHRISTMAS

&amp; GIFT SHOP

614-742·2617

,.,,.3

Bobotoltt• nOoded In my
deyo 1 woolc. COl 81 ... 44110028.

Philadelphia sune239-GO. On·

•Wrecker Service

-FREE ESTIMATESFor •Y of thKestrvKes

8-8-88-Hn

Factory Choke
12 Gouge Shotg101s Only
Strictly Enforctd
10.7-lfn

STEWART'S GUN

WANT TO BUY WRECifD OR
JUNI CAIS OR TRUCKS

992-2269

6:30 P.M.

•Junk Yard Business

Get Results Fast
WPk....le end ""tandng approximltlly 3.4 mil• of
tho Vinton County/Vinton

reclamation operation will
be conducted in Meigs

Pomeroy, Ohio
milts from Rt. 7 on
·County Road 26
11-25-'88-1 mo.

PER LOAD
OELIVERED

BILL SLACK

SAT. NIGHT

EXCAVATING

676- Pt. PINIInt
458 - leon
576-Apple Grove
773 - Meson
882 - New Heven
896'"-lttlrt
937- luff•a

Public

EVERY

Rd.

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe
•Will Do Hauling
Dump Truck

Ma1an Co .. WV
Aftt COde ~04

Gellle County
Are.Code614

$3 S

Basham Building

TRIPLE P

following telephone exchanges ...

SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY
MEIGS MINE NO. 2
LEGAL NDTIC E
SoJJthern Ohio Coal Company, Meigs Nine No. 2, P.
0 . Box 480, Athena, Ohio,
411701 , heo oubmitted on
and Ret;::lamatlon
Perm~ Numbered R-03551 D. to tho Ohio Deportment
of Natural R•ourcea. Divi~
slon of Reclamation. The
propoaed coal mining and

2

Classified pages cover rhe

Public N atice

application to revise a Coal

28-35WORD8
$7.00
$10 .00
115.00
$25, 00
seo.oo

Rot11 ooefof consecutive run•. brokan upd-v•wiD btch•ged
•• MP•rate ad1.

Public N atice

Mining

3597 S Flatw110ds

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

RACINEFIRE DEPT.

HARLEY HANING
RESIDENCE ·

Help Wanted

FIREWOOD

GUN "SHOOT

FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS
TREES

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

11

F111anr:ral
'"2"'1--;B;:..
=in=-e=-s:-:s:---Opportunity
1 NoncE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . feoommen• ttm you
do butinea with people you
know. end NOT to ~dmon.,
through thl mel untlyou hiVe
imleltlgated the oHwtng.
Earn aolld second Income in
vendng machin•. Fln~dng
available. Clll 1· 800· 4230271. .. ~. 47t0.
Hair Solon, high trofflc high
voklma shop. Reel~ cad tor quick

.,.. 304-125-3055 .. 30...
623-7277.

23

Professional

Services

Plano l..estone In tnv home.
beolnnlng to lnt...,d•e. Clll
81~441-0200.

�Page-8-The ~ly Sentinel

Pometoy-Middleport. Ohio
48

LAFF-A-DAY
31

S p - for Rent

53

Tuesday. December 6. 1988

Antiques

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

-~~f4ANbBO$:
.!f 'flJIJ lwe alov.~ witk a cat,
ma~ ~ll~e. you have. at lust hlo

Courmy Mobite Home P8rk.
Rou t e 33, North of Porn•OV·

Homes for Sale

Lots, rem•.

pwtt •

814-192-7479.

..ree.

c.n

Tr .. ., •PB•· Gallipolil Ferry.
.cttv V~oetw, g••bl9•

..,ea..
pick up k'lc::klded in rMt. e75.00

54 Misc.

73

Merchandise

chai~s .

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

'
1979 F,.d 41&lt;4. :100. 8 cyl, 14
ton. 0 1908.

oond. c.H 814-28•

Tu~y.D~mbHF~6~·~1~9~8:8~----------------------------~~~~m-~-o~y--M~~~fi~~~~·~O~h;~~~~---r--:::::::;~::~:The~=D~·;·I~y;&amp;wru;:;.":a:;P;•:ga•--9BORN Lo
SW&lt;J

l.OO:.i~~T M'

DID HE JUST

TAKe A SHOT
AT IJt 7,.

...ll\.A.T&gt;s ~t:.~:e W~~~

"IIJ""'

1975 Plymouth triH• Dult•. 4
wheel driY• 01 .000.00. 30+
57.2972.

Televi·s•'on
V IeWIDg
• •

"" "''"

'---

•

month. 304-1?5-8335.

74
49
4 BR .• full u ..m.u: • v•~·
fu It¥ ce-plttd (lome n.,.,) . City
schooll. Vtlitl• low. WoodbarF*'. N.tul"'t g• · furrwca.
Pricod to ttl. Col 814-44•
0 278 after 8 PM , WMkendl
.nytime.

Merchil 111hse
51 Hous81iold

Goods

5104.
REPOSSESSED GOVERN ·
MENT HO!IIESI Umltod limo.
low c:oet Nttio~W!Adeprogrw'ftl.
Coli lor IRiyer'o vu~llot to
Y94Jr area. 1 -31• 733-8014,
Ext. 0 2758.

,_.. on •ket Thrill t.dr'Oom
bric* wkh llnood 1-1
2
minut•• trom Hotzor. city
1cftoo... Mact.n ldlcll• wtth
•PPII•ca, l•ge ltwlng room
with tlrepl.ce. dining room.
famlr n»&gt;m. 1 ~ blthl. O.a
..... central eir, .u.ched ow-ue
with electric door GPM•· Low
••u,..ble mort0110• CaH 11~
4411-075~ ... 44.2428 •fl• 6
PM.

'"'"lot.

Ho&lt;11e for ..,., t300 me. ptlo
tee. dep. 122 J•ck•on St.
Vinton. OHColt 814-3811-9310.
~mo In oountrv wlh lend. 15
ml• tromn Athen1, 12 ·mll•
from Pom•Gr"· 114-192-1841.

31;;...,. 2.,.~tun . .,hod
b•'"*"·
.,_ ,,,.. lf1d
«*rtrel *·o•-oe. fenced yard.
2414 Mt V•non Aw .. Pt. Pfl: ..

~oed on ln1pectlon,. 304-87&amp;-

1174.

3;2
,,

Homes for Rent

3 IR .. 11-1 bot~ t . .tly """
IIPPL includN. 2 mi. from ctty.
Col1814-445-3907.

HouM for .... PottiJie ..,.d
cont-. 822 J.c*ton lt. VInton. 0H814-3811-9380.
In Cholhre. Ohio. 3 BR .. 2
....... oil olodrtc. AC. Dopo..
,..ulrod. C.ll814-317·7187or
70:1-3811-1109.

Nice hou• a v•as~• on St. At.
7 . t250 • mo. Pl. .• call
814-445-0038.

'

Hou•e. 2 beSooms, ldtc:hen
fully C8'p-. Nlco end
1170 New Moon 1 211:115 tMII•. 111-.
dean. no Inside
Oepo1tt
~ 114-289-1333·ott .. 8 PM.
. ...u~od. 814-99 ·3090.
2 . BR . Vlndlla mobile home. Whr rwtt whln you cen buy on
Ba12 • ..,do. C. .• Klngwoodo
lend contNet1 Htve 2 hou. . in
2 dod&lt;l. *51100. Col PomwCJ¥. Needl 110m1 ,_,..,,
814-256-11108.
Witt ..... rent. """' low prlcod.
Colt 814-992-2403 .. 8141182 moble horn.~
992·2780.
M•~ or take bill ott.r. 3
b4&lt;*oom. 2 bathl. Coli 814- FOR SALE OR RENT • 4
256-1010.
bedroom home, Phone 3041972 Arlington 12x&amp;O. Extr1 175-2130.
rico. t4000. Coli 814-266- 2 bed'oom hou•. blltt\ city
6793.
wat•. •chaol buL mil route.
Phono 30+99•3888.
1!73 2 IIR . Moon. 121&lt;55
ioi~dlng porch. u..torplnnlnSJ
Hou .. for ...,t or •I• in Mllaon.
refTI~ . c•p•-1 yr. o4d.
3 - ..... 9«- .... _
c:Urtelnt. furnac.-3 yra. . old. •nd
l•ge lot, lmllfl dlpoalr
Ow'* moving. Priced r_,ced .... Ired
304-8711-8877.
tq.bCJoo. c.11 514-379-227&amp;.
Full boo...n. ona .,d hell
1988 Fllllwood. 121&lt;54, bottle ltory, quite loc:.Uon. e mil•
gM halt and hot wat•. *3000. north of Point Pl...m, 304CaN 814-54:1-8310 or 814- 175-1071.
84~5408 onytlmo. Alk lor

lett.

toi•-·

w•

•ow.

Olnny.

Hou• far .m •110.00 month.
no kids. no ptltl, clll 304-8715Double wide mobile home. on 7443ott•
5:00PM.
fou rd1Uol\ approx. 2
do .. to town •n d achooiL lg.
kHchon. klunclry, 3 be&lt;*oomo. 2 42 Mobile Homes
batt.. MW c.pllt concnle~
for Rent
pO&lt;c:ft.- bod&lt; - · polio.
r.tlnil:hed cell•. pump. ac.tcondition. Lllrp b•n w•h
tuner•• ftoor. 81,.,.992-3218 In Ewek&amp;. 2BR. Adults Clfttrt. No
evtnlngl after 5:30 or pera. *200 1 mo. D~. rtqulred.
woohndl.
Colt 814-2411-5883.

.cr-.

..,t

614-885-4402.

KMa~ge

• •· Conatructlon
workert welcon.. CIU tn"'
44.0108.

1978 u...r., 141&lt;70. 3 bedroom. t7.10Q.OO. 30,.,.67~
1871 .. d 875-1783.

1981 O.trottlt' mo .. • home
40x12. cloen. U.IIOO.OO. 304876-2321.
10JI!O Mobile home for .....

·t1.1100.00. 304-57ti-172A

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

2 BR . mobile horN. Some
- · · polcl Call 814-44fl.
08011.

t.ge bJiclng

lotL moble homes p•mftted.
public water, 1110 riv• lott..
Clyde Bowen. Jr. 304-87•
2335.

36

Resl Estate

Wanted
Wtntld to leMa 01 buy hill top
I-'d fDr ltrUcture of tower lite.
Coli ooHICI. 304-529-2337 or
304-925-2337.

Rentals

St.-.lng M e 289 P« mo. Cll
814-317-71110.
Fw-nilhld . t. Ne• HMC. 1 BA.

t235. Utlhl• pold. Cal .......
4418ott.. 7 PM.

Aportmllllt lor tho Elderly.
G•lll• Minor ApwtmtnU. 86&amp;
B u111 Morton Ro..t.
for
tho Senior Chloen 112 oi~J
•nd Haula.pped pnons. Equal
houalng opportunity. Appllcetlono-boplc*odupotSprlng
Vallllf
529 J1ckson Pike
or clll 814-44.4839.

o.••r•

Reg. Rat Teirria' puppl•. t75
814-445-1384.

2 Pure I toad D1chlhund fem•le

Moct.n 1 BA , downtown. como

pupswlth•hots. t1 25eech. C11l

814-445-4046.

pt•o ldtdl.,_ air, C8'p.. Depoatt, no , ••. can 814-«...
0139 evenings. aft• &amp;.

lA. ept. "'% mil• from
Glllft:l,alll. StOlle, tefrig. &amp;. wet•
furnllhed. •2211 mo. No pits.
Coli 514-44.8038.

CF Au otic •hott·halred Pltnlll'l.

Spw,~ed t.mole. 11-1 yuro old.
C8m.o lhede with copper eyes.
114-192-8837 ott.. 4:00.

90 Oey1 1.-ne •

AkC Regilt- Bouott pupo. 8
afd. t125.Call614-887·
8758.

c•h with

8PIJf'O'Ad credit. 3 MH• ou.t
Bulwlle Rd. Open 91m to 5pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 814-4460322.

Rah Tank. 2413 Jackaon Ava,
Point Pt--. 304-875-2083.
10 gelaet up •1•.99•nd 10gel
C0-143.25.

1 &amp; 2 BR .,_,....,., $300
month. lndudll all utilltl•.
AduHo only. no polo. dep.
requlrod. Coli 814-44.4222

AkCreglot ..odCook•SpMiolt,
Weothtght.,dWhheTorrlor, Siborl., HUI""'Vt, 304-875-2193.

bllwa.~96&amp;.

..AK;,;:r.~•ed Slber'-' HuS:.

Nicely furnllhod 1·2 BR . W111•

a P'biiU•p.td. PrNIItepwkftg.
Dlpook ._trod. C.ll814-446434tl ~- 5 PM.

key
both p.eren'1 c.n be
-·phone 304-875-6800.

Mod•n 1 BR . IP trtment. Cal
814-446-0390.

57

Pomeroy-2 BR. remodeled
., ... - off Spring A ... Sec.
dep. • ref. Cell aft• 8 PM,
81 .. 99Z.88a8.
Fw'nil:hed downaa.irl, 3 roonw
• t.l:h. Cl.... No P••· Adutta.
Ret. &amp; clop. Oft~~- porklng-1
c•. c.n 814-446-1819.

-'&lt;

r···

dtooroted. 2 BR .. fully
c ..
Sec. dop. ._Ired.
Col 814-446-81158 .. 4464758.

zaR moblehome .. Ewt'graen.
pe, Sund&amp;¥ calli pi-e. Call

In Tuppers Plains, 2 be•ooms.

•17&amp;. p• month plua depo.tt.
Coli 814-887·34B7.
3 be«oorns, centNI air, ••
electric, fully ca"pet«&lt;. Nice
nelahborhood in Midcleport.
ColT 814-992·51&amp;1.

2 BR ... rnlohod. -herllo ~r.
*225 • mo. Jlkl• dep. &amp; utlllti•.
Coll814-992-7479.

3 beG'oom trll• for rent. AI
ot-Ic. On Ro&lt;*oprlngo Rd.
Mo1tty furnished Including
-•h• lnd dryor. 814-992·
3182.
1~70

Homes for RBnt

Nicelv funUhed •mall hou•.

Aduho only. Ref. ~lrod. No
poll. Call 814-445-0 31.

For Sale

M'l' BEST SCENE WAS

u!~ERE JOSEPH DRIVES IllS

FAMILV TO E6'(P\ IN A

'5b

if.lUNDERBIRD•.

6:30 8 (%1

&amp;

Fruit
Vegetables

All kindl flncv frutt. nut• .-.c1

cendvforChriatmea, 10pwcent
discount to Church group~ .
Jod&lt;l Fru~ Morkot. Rt 35.
Hondanon. W.Va.

liP'·

~.11111

F~ot

Suppli1;o;

(; LIVUS(Uck

Ap . . ment for rent. t22&amp; •
month. Oepostl ,..ulr.:t. 114-

81

Farm E~ipmBnt

UTILITY aLDG . SPL .:

30'x40'x8'8" Cle•.-.ce. 115'x8' trade door. 1-3' walk

tldllti• •.ttabl• c.a e1498Z.3711 . EOH.

Sky-~

Excan.n: condltioR Call 614-

44&amp;-8578.

.

1978 Ford LTO ll.1111to., PS. PB.
eir, low mileag• Cal 814--2581&amp;29.
1971iJoop. 8450. 1987Dodgo.
•37&amp;. 1978 Ford Ven. •1800.
Coli 614-25.8888.

m.,..,

1978 Corvette l -82. 4 1peed.
11rot e58oo. •k• 1. 61+9492188 dayo, 814-247- 4861
night,.

1981 El C.mlno. 1988Mezdl B
2000 ond 1984 Couo-. can
814-992-530A
1980 Mercury Marquil
8 rough.-n. 4 door, full power.
Reel 1hlrp c•. t1891. 814992-8719.
For • w..t deal on 1 n• or used
cw. truck or 'Aft. HIKMnyBell
at Jim Mink ChevroletOtdlmoblle. 814-44&amp;-3872 or
304-77:1-&amp;134.
1984Ren&amp;~hF-. 1.81hre.6
speed. sun roof, air, tRt AM -FM
c.taetto. 31 . 000 mH&amp; like
. - . t:uoo.oo. Phon• 30+
8711-8991 or &amp;75-7326.

1984 Plylnouth Rolin WlgOI\
AT. PS, PI, AC, CC, &amp;9.000
mil-. exc oond. 13,400.00.
304-882·3851 .
1978 Monto Corio. 1980 Cutl•u. 1979 MallbJ atatlon

waoon.

1179 Pontiac Lem .....

door: .4999 ER ECfEO. Iron I 19780odgeCh•g•. 304-875HonoBidrw. Colli 14-332-974&amp; 7855.
Coli eel.
1977 Ford Anto. auto. tnn1.,
lh•p. t1 ,480. Phone
8&amp; M F tractor, Nice. w/M F
304-875-2072.
Dyne Bounce mowing mlthln e.
late model No. 12 hB'f IHII•.
'76 Monte Corio. 304-87111379!.latemodel 12&amp;001tver &amp;131.
tractorP&amp; 31 HP, .2795. New 3
pt. Ntch wood aplttt•. t319.
1988 Ohla Cutl•• Ci•a. one
ONn• wll fln•ce. CeH 814-c:Miner, low mileege. u:c cond.
28.8822.
304-875-1238.

One Month F,.. Rent
Qulliifiecl rtntWI PlY t200.
dlpo11t end no rent far the

R••

montt\ November or Dec.,ber only. VII age Manor
., d Rtv . .lde AJ'"nrnento In

Mldcleport. From •182.

814-992-7787. EOH.

New efficient¥ 1 or 2 bectoom
aptt. ~Middleport. Furnilhlldor
unfurnished. C1ll 114-992·
&amp;304or 514-992-2ns.

· ee Cuttau. PW, oru~o. tilt.
AM·FM c•oetto. V·8, 304-8758336.
"79 Oldl C

1980 W20B c... ortiQIIolod. 4
WD• ..,aded with cab, locat«&lt; in
Point Pleuant , W. V.e.
U8.000.00 o .a.o. 91:1-862·
0084 Moncloy thru Fridoy.

3 be*oommobllehome,

3 bedroom mobla home you .-v

utllitie1. deposit, 304--87&amp;·
2838.

Wood IPIIn•. 5 hp 8 rig go
Strll1ton onglno. like n-.
neo.oo. 304-87&amp;-3289.

1919 Dlltroller mobile home,
1180.00 ·month utllhl• pold.
ol- 304-875-2321

1 5th. Call 304- 175- ~331.

utt.U

runs good.

straigM • enginetndtan•mi•
olol\ 304-175-553A

79 Motors Homas
&amp;Campers

1973 28 tt. Champion Motor
· Home. Powered with 1 Chrytl•

440 .. ~ $4500. Call 814-38118288.
.

38 ft. Convenion CoiCh Bus.
V· 8 Ctmminl englna IS aJ)d.
trens. .Partt;' oustomiled. Can
614-388-8256.

8840.

FRANK AND ERNEST
,.

Wf Re WAY AI'IEAD
&lt;:&gt;F ALL ou~
"'

po~s li ~NOW

iCf-1 ~ANI&lt; :t:'M

COMptTlilOI\I ~-

SWITCHING

OU~ COMPUi!:f?
~Nows
~~~~~

ABOUi

MY FuNDS

Tb?

7:30

illl 811121 tm

Jeopardy!
GlaD M•A•s•H
1121 Croaaltrw
® Night Cour't
7:35 (II Sonlord and Son

you.

Home

8:00 (%1 MOVIE: Slerre Beron

NOT IF TH'

(1 :20)

FLV MAI(ES
TH' SPIDER

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Hfetlm•
tee. Loci! ret. . . oea: furnilhed.
Free ertin'Mitee. Call ooled
1-814-237-0ABS. d"" or night.
RogertB••ement
Wet•proofin g.

gu.,..,..

e (%1

EII&lt;T HIS
S'M)R.DI

behind diplomatic immunity.

~Bodybuilding Men's

SWEEPER ll'ld aewingmachine

,

Cerpente Wor~by hour or Job.
Pan ellnQ. painting. dryMII. r•
modllln~ C1ll Fred Cole. 814-

IS

HG:

PIJWtJIIJG

44.79A3

m RWRJR

RON'S Television Service.
Houn cllll on RCA. Quarar,
GE . Speohlln11 In 2enkh. Col

RX.rrtCAL

•I

OFFICE; 1

304-678-239e or 614-4452454
Fetty Tr• Trim"*'g. tturnp
Call 304-175-1331 .

.......,,1.

Ak. . TreeTrimmlng.,dStump
Removal. Free lltlml'l:•. Call
304-875-7121 .

'IOU'RE ARR~~
SE:L..FI5H, YAIN1
SNE'AKY...

ADDLEPATE8 1300RISH
CRUDE:, AND r NEVER
WANT TO SEE: 'l'OL! AGAIN

ADDLEP.ATED~

Aon'1 Chimn., SwMp, spedll
thru Oocem,_ t38.85. Colt
30+773-534e or 77~8B40.
Ronnie Nell.

0 . Gr.-. endaonsConcret••d
ContriCiin; 1m...,' and axt•
rfor pelnting, c.-pentery and
masonry.
Ceptlin Steem•CieanwL get 2
average aile rooms c1rpe1
cle•ad t18. 00 each. with thAI
ad, 30+87•22911.

82

WHAR'S HE UVET

Plumbing

I'LL
TELL

&amp; Heating

GO

OVER AN'
HIM A THING

HIM IS
A HER!!

OR TWO!!
CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
GoUlD oh. Dhlo
Phone 814-448-3888 or 814446-4477

84

72

Relldentill or comm•cial wiring. New •.vice or . repein.

Electrical •
&amp; Refrigeration

85

c.,

a.c ...rt:211vl"' · - 31R .. 11-1
b•honone•l•. 1 M . • bllhon
ather. Both ldtdl- vnlohod.
IdiotO..toilb
tor '""'""p.-k•r.,..
with -.-....
ent.
Wolk

o--·
........... ·--to
· utlh:l•. Dlpoell
.371.
mo.-plut
•
- - · COl 81.4-441-4125.

..:..

d. . . . VIr. . . ~ . Smith . . .

!&amp;114-. . .- ·

2 Ifill .. till bxur••l. ..,...
o-. wPtJ. &amp;M'IIIirdA"". No
Ret. &amp; clop. Ono ollltcl Cal
814-4-tB-1113.
· 3 BR . ctoublo. bell. ooncl
A.arDH from Oatil• Acedlrnr.
•210 . per mo. Coli 114-44fi.
004IO&lt;--OflwiPM.

go
clean cond, • IJ. OO
month. pluo dopoolt. 304-871119721111• 8:00.
2 mobile ho.,-. furnitwed for
rant. 2 . bedroom apat"*l1
furnished. phone 304-17&amp;8812 0&lt;8711-3900.
2 -oom mobile homo. s .. d

(I)

R &amp; R Wol w Service. Poolt,
Cllttrna, wel11. lmmedl••
1,000 • 2,000glllon• dellv.-y,

IH-;:II;""=ed.::;:30=+:e~7:5-:3:8::;34=.=::.
,44

Apartment
fo r R Bitt

-n.

2 BR . opto. 8 oloooto, ldtdl.,.
oppl. ......... W•hlr-Oryor
hoot.,.- pluoh- tlo.
~
llloo good
30

C.ll 304-87.8370.

One

furr*hed ..,_..
mont. upet- utlh._ polcl
Rot..enoo .,d depoolt -~ed.
30+8711-1780.

m";l'r;~no.or "~11-~5 ~ 45

Fumithed

875-7731.

New completefy furnished
•p_..ment • moble home In

otty. Acklltt only. Porldng. Col
114-445-0338.

count.,

87

•71 1 mo.

Uphol stary

lh••

UtNitl•
lin ale mal&amp;
both. Co 445-44"1hfler7PM.

Hot.l14-445-llllao.

•.ooo CIPID'

Coli .,d Hmeot- dollvory,
phone 304- 1711-3190.

Furnllhld r~918 hcond

Ava, ~ola.

2.000 to

lty, clll•no. poolo. wollo, etc.
30 .. 876-2919.

Roo1111

Aoon tor rW·week or month.
AltM"*"- .,d hou... C.l .St.-tlng at t120 1 mo. 011111
304-87.810A

W•tterton"• W•ter Heuling.
r. .onlble ret-. volume dt•-

be~oom

"This one says, 'Let's all try walking on our
hind legsl'"

(

Mbwrfrf'• Uphottt.-ing llrving
trl DlnlylrA 23ye.... The._.. ·
~ llrntture uphotlterlng. Cd
304- 875 -4 154 for ftel

estlmet•. '

TBA

m

ASTRO•BRAPH·

(1 :38)

Bernice Bede Osol

General Hauling

J &amp; JWat• Servtoe. Swimming
D0011. cllt•n"- wells. Pf't . 61~
2459285.

CD Top Rank Boxing
(I) 8 (J) Moonlighting
Maddie and David are
watched as they sort out
their relationship. 1;1
III &lt;D The American
Experience Follow 1he prollle
olearly black r~hm and
blues singers. 1;1
®l Billy Grwham
I!]J Lorry King Uvel
811121 'Trlcka or lhe Trwde'
CBS Tueeclly Movie When a
highly respected , aHiuent
stockbroker is murdered, his
pampered wile and a
high-priced prostitute join
forces to find out who killed
hlm. C
.
II! Colitllll Beakelball
9:30 (!) Cotlelll Beekelbalt
® New Country
10:00(}) 700 Club
1J (%1 tm Midnight C.ller A
caller threatens to kill his
unfailhlut girllriend and
himsell.
(I) Ill (J) lhlrtyiomethlng
Michael and Hope discuss
the pros and cons of having
another baby. Q
(lJ Chriaunaa with the
Monnon Teblrnecle Choir
1111 Carty Simon
aD ISemey Miller
I!]J Evening Newa.
QDCrookandChllu
10:20 (IJ MOVIE: Speed1rap (PUJ

Pl.,ta Sub.-4 IR .• fuH .,_. 2 bltcroom tral•. Hendareon.
mlftt c•p• 0• Nn..- city
od
17

schooll. Adult• ontv-on• child.
No ••~ o.,.. a. Rtf. required.
t328 P.. mo. Coli 814-44•
0271 aft• &amp; PM, WHktndll
anytime.
Hou•7 rooms. unfurnlthN.
U28. 29 Noll Aw .. O.llpolo.
445-4-t1hlt• 7 PM .

Championship from Atlanta,
GA
(I) Ill (J) Who' a lhe Boe•?
Samantha and Mana decide
to give up men. 1;1
(lJ &lt;D Nova C
liiJ •1121 TV f 01 Kevin is
insuned when a top student
decides lo Quit 1he class. 1;1
G1 aD MOVIE: AthenU IRJ
(1 :57j
1121 PrlmeNewa
181 Night coun
II! Munier, She Wrote
Clll Nealtvllle Now
11:01 (II NIIA Beek-11
8:30 (I) Ill (J) R-nne At the
bowling alley, Roseanne
sneaks a peek at Becky's
llrsl love. Q
181 College Beakolboll
9:00 11 (%1 112lln lhe Heat or lhe
Nlghl Woman claims that
motive lor killing her
~standing lather was incest.

Rot.-y or c•bl• tool drilling.
Most well oomplllltld ..meday.
PUmp Ill• end a.-vice. 304895-3802

w•h.-•.

.
I!)) Madock A British

ambassador reruses to hide

r..,li', p. .., 1nd tuppU•. Pick
up a~d delivery. Dnil Vaouum
Cleaner, one half mile up

RON'S APPUANCE 8 ERVICE,
houoo c~l ,.,Icing GE. Hot
Point.
drytrl and
..,.,... 304-67.2393.

e (%1 Family Feud

(!) College Beakllball
(I) En-lnrttlnt Tonight
8 (J) USA Today

Improvements

Licented electrld~. E•lmate
fr• Ridenour Elec:trfcal, 3046751788.

32 lA
.• AC, c•pet. pool. •aoe. Homtat•d Ae _,
....... , SIII .. Rent
ftrepl-. fence. Good ....,.
don. Call A -1 Aell Elhlte tr.U•. 4 tot., elc. t13.500.00.
8rok•. 30+875-8104.
NonOI' Cantarllury, 304-8711-

~1'141 ~

.

S'VE'RYiHING

Services
81

\

·ct·
1

'80 Pordloc G..,d PriK, 92.000
mila good ooncl t1.200.00.
304-875628A .
Trucks for Sale

$1'1.

280 ·· Oldl englna 304-8753049.

1984 Dodge Art•. SW. Auto.,
Air, 12.99.. Johnl Auto S.t•.
Below Holldoy Inn. Kan.,ge.

FO&lt; Sol .. 1984 Bulc*

~.M../J,Il,.n.ri.~

Dec.

Painting: lnt•lor &amp;: Elftllrlor.
Free lltlmat•. Cell 814--44•
8344

58

2 be*oOm Apt, , for nnt.
Clrp•ed. Nice sen:tng.. laundry

1980 Chwy Citltion. automll11c. 4 dr.. t1000. 1978
Chevy MllibJ Cl••ic: Stltlon
W-n. e10o. c.u 814-37112585.

bv

7:00 (%1 Our Houae DiHerent
Habits
(%1 PM Magazine
(!) SporUCenlor
(I) Ill (I) CurNnl Aftalr
(lJ &lt;D MacNeil/ Lehrer
New1Hour (1 :00)
iiiJ 811121 I!)) WhMI ol
Fortune!;!
Gl aD Three'a Company
1!11 Moneyllne
·
®Cheerw
01 Mleml Vice
Clll USO Celebrily Tour: Lee
G'""wood Country music
hilmaker Lee Greenwood
entertains American military
personnel stationed in Spain,
Italy, Greece, Turkey, and
aboard ships of the slx1h
fleet.
7:05 (II Andy GrlffHII

e

..POOR BOYS llR ES
Movhlg to Rt. 3&amp;; Hendenon.

1984 Buick Wagen. Extraah•p.
low mlloege (45,00tJI . 6 cyL
with
•tr~a. Tom Amderton 814-992· 3348.

•eoo. oo.

or 892·

1979 Monte Carlo. V·8, t-top1.
AM-FM·Ca... PW. PS. tlh.
IBIIO. 1879 Chewy Love 4 WD .
Coli 81 .. 2511-1584

Am oriel
(I) It (J) ASC Newt 1;1
(lJ Body Electric
(I) Nightly Bualneoo Report
iiiJ 811121 CBS Ntwe
G1 aJ) WKRP In Cincinnati
1!11 ShowBiz Today
® WKRP In Clncj netl
01 Cartoon Ex~aa
Clll You Can Be 1 Star
6:35 (II 9 to 5

BUDGET TRANSMISSION·
Uud 8t rebuilt all typal.
W ..Only.3Q dw,!L Pri'* U9 &amp;
up. Uud •
rlbdtt torgu •
converten. StanUd dutch•.
pr•aure plat-. • throw out
be•ing. W•ra~ty-12 m01. CVC
jolntt·lll typos. can 514-37112220"' 304-875-6758.

W. Ve . inl(l n-.v blda.

I!)) NSC NlghUy News

~ Schol. .lic Spona

Auto Pa.r ts
&amp; Accessories

lndtvldual gu lt1r I• so"', .,.
ginnlfl.
guftarilt. Bru~
Music. 114-US-0887,
Jeff Wlm11., Instructor. 814448-8077. Limited openings.

bols. he•vv duty stand.
Phone Hest• 304B82·2048.

mo. t78 dop. Utilltl• pold. No
chH&lt;*en. 94 LoQiot. CoH 11444.1340, 44.3870.

Choc* the10 ·OUt I 1984 Z·28,
85900. 19B4 Multeng. 83100.
1984 Eeoon, t1995. , 1883
Firoblrcl MBOO. 1983 Colt
$1600. 1982 MerOJry lynx.
e986. Rotllff'o Auto Sol-.
Vlnto" Ohio. Coli 814-386.'
9631 or 44.6679.

78

QIIDrg~~~ Crllllk Ad. Call 814-44.0294

F urnilhed 3 room IPf. *225 p1r

99:1-5724. Afl• 8pm
8119.

Auto's

198001dlmobile0mega. 4•pd.
eeoo. eanet+44&amp;-921e.

e pc Ludw ... *oms with aym-

Apertmtnt for rent tn town.
Pur nil hod. Colt 814-4411-1423.

Furnilhed 1 lr. mocWn
Dip, • ret. No P••· 980
Avo. Coll61 .. 446-1079.

71

Hlmmond B-10 ora.., e300,
Coiii14-9B!I-3949.

Trombone. greet cond. grett for
begin..,, 304-5211-8080 cir
304-87.3384.
•

GolllpoliiForiy, 304-8711-4088.

41

Musical
Instruments

c•• •rtou•

Z BR. moble home for rent in

2 Br., unfurrWelwd. 12xl0.
Mlher hook-up. In CheeNre.
Colt 814-445-4.388 .. 3048759780.

Pets for.Sale

eech. 1 male. 1 female left. C1ll

Bldwol. CoU 8!4-448-9688.

814-3711-2878.
A1ht01\ bea~tlful

dlo-.

cllll&lt;*en. No polo. C.ll114-4469332.

t1900.

14ll70 \Mth 7x21 mcpando.
phone 30~8715-8141 .

T•• Townhou1e tpa1rnenls- 2
BRo.. 11-1 bothl. CA .. dlt·
hw .....
privll1o enatoood p•to. pool. ptw,~ground.
Wat•. eewer. &amp;. trah Included.

Nic~2

I Tl-lOUGHT I WROTE
A GOOD PLAV, TOO ..

CHRISTMAS PLA'(
WAS CANCELED

'8&amp;Honda80XLS81r•endtr..
blh ..... iotJol wkh hllmot.
good aond. t450. 00 or belt
off... 30+882-3627.

1984 Chevy Ch••te. AutoOroom end slippty Sho~Pift mlltlc. AM radio. almoat new
Grooming. All breedi ... AII tlr•. 80,000 ml•. Re• ••'
illY'-· tama ,.. Food O..ler. needl r..,ced. t1000. For
Julie Webb Ph. 814-445-02~1 . more informMion clll PaUl It
814-446-2342. Moy .,.,.., ot
D-nwynd Cottw Kennel. · Tho Golllpolts Dally Tnt.one. 11-5
CFA P. .l., .,d Slam . . kft. weekdoyo.
tent. AKC Chow puppi... N.W
Hlma18't'., kltt. .. t.ll 814- Government Selnd Vehlcltl
fram 8100. Fordt, Merced•.
414.38441111• 7 PM .
Corvettu. Chwy1. Surptu1.
AK C Coclcar Spaniel pups, Buv-t Guide. 111 805-887·
melet-t1BO, femelel·t200 . 8000, ""· S-10119.
Tllklng depotlt lor Chrlltmn.
1988 Plymouth Horiron. Auto.,
Coli 814-318-1190.
otr, 4 dr. Coli 814-3711-2728.
Weot Hlght.,d Whhe Terri•L
AleC puDIJI•. A Chriltm11 Gift 1982 ptymouth Arl• K. nice"'"' wM lat. Cell 814-387· ., 59&amp;. 1981 Cholly Pickup
truck, V-8, outo. PS ,PB. t1995.
0824.
' Coli 814-288-8522.
Reg. hoi'"*" Himoloyen o111.
E-. breeding _..,_ .eatJ 1972 Pontiac C1tallna Call
814-2411-8457.
oftw 5 PM. 11+4-t•404.3.

F11nilhld 2 -BR . apatment m
town. t200amo. t100dep. No

Mldd oport. 2 bodroorno. eon
614-992·1515.

1 979 S.yviM moblte home,

56

Moble Hom• for rtnt. In

Moblehomeandlot. tHOO. In

2 -004'0 'f2x50.
30+875-2722.

Rt. 38 C~le Sol•. lout,...
wv. Ph. 1-304-8711-4130. Now
Soiling Now Pot ..to 4whMI . .
andulld•whHin. ·

attention than she'd hoped.
INRI
(I) Dr. Who The Mutants
GlaD Happy Doya
® Facta of Life
01 Fa1 Alben
Clll Fandango
6:05 (II One Dar at a Time

'98 Suzu~ ()led Spol'l, 30+
875-2981 IIIlO( 8:00.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK.
SON ESTATES. 838 Jocklon
Pike from •183 • mo. Walk to
ohop end mcrvill. 814-4462888. E.D .H.

8211-1 Sec. E-. oond.. 2BR ..
oqulpped kltch.,, olf. A""Uobte
Nov. tot t22&amp; ~dep. Col
2158.
814-445-01103 or

new shoes attract more

I HEAR 'I'OUF:

40 1tll ~ NEA, Inc,

Pf••·

• ·laoo. Coli 514-44.0390.

1ob:IO Felrmont Trail•·

bedroom

Apartment
for Rent

1•ea New Moon 12lc&amp;O. 2 BR .

ce..,.

1988 Honda 250 4 TraK, h•dtl
taed. lnt offer. C•H 114-'"81120..,.,1ngo.

t:;;:::;:;::::::::;=:;:;;::T=========:1
41
44

'

*4500. O.a furnece. Woukl
contkllr land contmct. Cell

Fir.,.,ood for Mle •30 pldwp.
deUvtnd. 821 U-hall. R•ccoon
Rd. Coli 514-445-4982.

"That better not be a personal call, Comstock!"

3 aR .. wooher/dryor hook up, 1
c.- •aue. t300 • mo. •150
dop. Ro ... or VMoge II. Col
814-4411-48311.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

uoo. Call 814-44.1724 ...
4-4.8874.

clotNna. mite. Ae110nlllle. Cll
814-445-8412.

•

1:00 rn Bonen&amp;e: The Loot
Eploodn
• (%1 (I) Ill (I) IBl 1111121
tm Ntwa
(!) SportoLoolt
(lJ Ramona Ramona 's brand

1987 Hondl Z· l50. Like n.,..,

furniture- llmoat new, kitchen
lttnll. antlquw, mtn &amp; WOn"IIM

DEC. 6

EVENINQ

fSAVEt Buy moll ordlr. VldiOI/ CO • m~~g•ln•. MTWTF
lam to 4pm Call 1·614-4480742 •t. L-3

llv ing room •

3 BR . houH, dokJu. AC. &amp;
po~SIIIeorTreck. 4811 . t.ou ..,
good loc:Mion. Cll 304-175-

Motorcycles

For Lease

Comm•dal Building tor leale.
Pt. Plo-t. Coli 304-875510A

TUES.,

AQUARIUS (Jen. 21).Feb. 11) Lady pression to your creative inclinations !
Luck tends lo lavor you today In com~ today, especially In matters where you
petltlve career arrangements. Don't be can transform conditions in ways that
hopes and dreama you were reedy learf\11 II you have to match your akllla will benellleveryone Involved.
LEO (July 231-Aug. 22) The personal
,o wrl1e on could be reYIIallzad In the agalnat the Haavywelgh1a .
year ahead . What appeared to be lm- PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20) Put your- . Identity lor which you've been searchpoaolble may now come Into the realm aell In 1he other guy's position It you Ing recently can be found by returning
to your roots. The answer tlee at 1he
of potltliblllty.
have to judge another today. Compas·
BAQITTARIU8 (Now. 231-Dec. 21) slon and tolerance could help you make core.
VIRGO (Aug. :ZS.Bept. 22) This should
Evanta continue to work 10 your ulll- a now lrlend.
mate edvantageln this time lrame. even ARIEl (March 21-Aprll 11) A joln1 In- be a auccesstul day lor you concerning:
situations thai you dO not personalty In I- · terest whose real wonh has had you
your personal Interests. You'll lnsllnc•'
lively know how lo get what you wan!' ·
ttate. Oon'llose lallh where end reeults puzzled lhould begin to clarify llaelf towithout appearing too sell-serving to'
are concerned. Know wltelllto look lor day and give you a chance to evaluate It
romance and you'll lind n. The Aslro- property. You should be pteaaad:
others.
Graph Matchmaker Instantly reveata TAURUS (Aprii20-Mer 20) Panneranlp ·LIBRA (Bepl. 231-0cl. 23) Poaslblllllllll ,
which lfljne are romantically perfect tor arrangements that you enter at this time
lor material glln con11nue to be avail- ,
you. Mall $2 to Matchmaker, o/o this ! have long-tasting pOtential. Each will · able lor you &amp;1 thlo lime. Grasp at every•
nowopaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, . learn from the other and derive collec·
opportunity, even though they may ap. '
OH +t101-3428.
live benellls aa wall.
pear rather J""lgnlllcant Ill) the aurface
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.len. 11) People GEMINI IMIJ 21-.lune 20) Continue to · SCORPIO lOci. 24-No¥. 22) II your Ob·
who have your best tnlereat at heert will explore llde ventures 1hat could be
jec!IVIIII are realistic, you can accom·
go out or their way to be ol personal aa· meanlnglul to you llnonclally. Your poaptleh wha1ever you " ' your mind to In
alstonce to you loday. Don't be raluc- slbtlllles for finding something rather Juthla cycle. In matters where you are In·
tant to request favors from friends cratlve remain encouraging.
·tensely motivated, your powers to
you've helped.
CANCER (June 21-.luly 22) Give full ex·
achieve are rather awesome.
Dec.I,19SI

J

10:30 Gll!ll Odd Couple
181 Newt
® VldeoCountry
11:00(%1 Remington Slelle Steele
Away With Me, Port 1
.. (%1 (I) (lJ • (J) liiJ
811121 ll2l Newa
(!) Lighter Side of Spotll
&lt;D Sign Off
IDI!ll Love Connection
I!]J -yllno
® Tel• 1nmt the Derkelde
II! Miami VIce
® You C.n a Bllr
1 t :30 II (%1 tm Ileal ol Carwon
(!) BpomC.nter (L)
(I) Cltllrw
III b i l l ! - A continuing
chronicle or the lives or
residents In LondOn's East
End. (0:30)
8 (J) N(flltUine 1;1
liiJ USA Today
QII!]J ljewiJwad Gerttl
IIJl 8pofll Tonlgltl
81121 'Nighl Hell" CBS Lite
Night A guilt ridden O'Brien
ta determined to track down
his nemesis. IR)
® Hill , _ . lluee
Q!1 American Mapolne

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0 Rearrange
)otloro of tho
four scrambled words be-

' low

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I

to form four •implo word,

NECCAH

I

UCAET

~1.:--T-'1"-r.--1~T-il

j

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,_.fs-·_,o,.T'-rH.;.....;I,_.,I ;
~ I I' I I .

Teacher to tounh grade
class: " When you 're in too
much of a rush , you're liable to

6

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L.

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WYDRAT

~~~-~morethanyou-up

~-.-.~--~r.g&gt;TI-,1-;Ir-t
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Comple•e the chvclde quoted
by f •llmg In the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

I I· I I IUP I I I I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Mirage - Notch - Troop - Hetpic ·- . CHAMPION
My brother-in-law owns and operates hts own_ hot dog
stand. 1got him a sign lor his van . It read: " The W1ener and
Slill CHAMPION."

BRIDGE

NORTH

11-f.ll

+J 10 B
•Qs 5

By James Jaeoby

tJ7
+AKIOI3

Four spades was a good eontract
but was in jeopardy against best de·
WEST
EAST
lense. With four trumps headed by the
+A532
ace, West rightly . judged that his best .Kt62
• AJ7 3
+64
tQ1095S2
chance qf defeating the game contract
+174
+I 2
·was to find weakness In the heart suit
and start pumping declarer out of
SOUTH
trumps. So he led a heart. East took
.KQ964
the jack and played back a heart to
.104
West's ktng, and West continued with
t AK8
the third round. Viewing the deal as
.QJ5
routine, declarer ruffed and banged
Vulnerable: North-South
down the king of spades. West played
Dealer: South
low. A low spade to the 10 in dummy
came next, and West naturally played
Nordl Eut
Welt
Sottli
low once again. Declarer was now up
1+
against it. Another spade would be
Pass
2+
Pus
34
4+
3+
Pus
taken by the ace; then the play of the
Pa58
Pass
Pass
fourth heart would drive South out of
trumps. But a chance does exist lor de·
Opening lead: • 2
clarer, if be doesn't give up.
A pel'limistic declarer would now
play A· K of diamonds and ruff a diamond, but that would let West shed a trump ·for any useful purpose. NatO
low club. The optimist does it di!ler- . that declarer might be set two tricks il
ently. He will play three rounds of West is able to ruff the third club. (H~
clubs, boping that West must follow. would then cash the ace of spades and
When that is the case, South can play exit with a heart, leaving South with ll
A·K and ruff a diamond. That leaves later diamond loser.) But the game bo-~
West incapable of using his small . nus justifies :he play.

.7

rass

..

...CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 War god
1 Swedish · 39·Very (Fr.)
· rock
group

5 Light ·
·giver
9 Metric
weight
10 Alaska

DOWN,

1 Guam s
capital

2 Money

(sl.)
3 Crafty

·purchaser
shopper
4
12 Ethereal
Ms ..carter
13 Commercial 5 Inclined ,. 21 Skin
6
ship
~~s:r'!..n
opening
14 Annoy
7 Name
22 Ancient
15 Weight
a price!
Hebrew
8 Forestall
kingdom
unit
.
16 Wagnenan 10 "Romancing 23 Wedding
heroine
the · •
17 Unyielding (19M film) 24 Set
19 Sea gull 11 Delineated
20 Lytton
Zest
heroine
Trench
21 Sean
r,·-r:lr-"l:r-trror Arthur
22 Complication

Anllwer

Role fot:
Heston
28 Bowling
term
29 1'he - of
Harrow"
( 1974 film)
34 Winter
road
hazard
35 Fast Jet
'

.

23 - of arms b-+-+--i24 Thai m~~ey
..' · 25 Give ·notice

b-++.....J

28Aussie's
bird

27Decamp
30 Started
(poet.)

31 Unit

1

32 Backward

33 Writer or
painter

35 Tunisian
seaport
36 Family

members
370mamental

pattern

DAU.YCRYPTOQUOI'I!$- Here's bow to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

1111

One letter stands for another .. In this sample A Is uaed
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single lettera,
apostnJphes, the length and fonnatlon of the words are aU
hlnls. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
K YZJ

YDXLZ

l SA
LS

ZJZFMZX,

DEZ

MRR

WSEUMBZ

WSE

IS A

FDPZ
ISAE

F DI

EZTSBZE.-DFVESXZ
VMZETZ
Yeaterda7'1 CI'J)Itoqaote: TilEY TAKE PRIDE IN
MAKING 111Em DINNER COST MUCH; I TAKE PRIDE IN
MAKING MY DINNER COST LITTLE.
HENRY
1110REAU

•

..

�'&gt;'

.,

&gt;

P.Qa · 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•
Continued from page 1

EMS has five Moncroy calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Monday; Racine at 4:50a.m . to Third St. for Carden Randolph
to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Middlepor t at 11 :10 a .m. to
Mulberry Ave. for Robert Rllfle to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland Fire Department at12: 25 p.m. to a brush fire
on New Lima Road; Pomeroy at 3:35 p.m. to Oak St. for Louise
Conde to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse Fire
Department at 11: 52 p.m. transported Tracy Hein from an au to ·
acc!denyon Dutchtown Road to Veterans Memorial Hospl\81.

-----~a

Marybell Rowels

I

· VIvian Quickel Powell, 84, of
; Santa Barbara Road, Orlando,
. Fla., died Saturday at Grace
Villas Nursing Home In Orlando.
: A homemaker, she was born
March 25, 1904 In Winfield,
W.Va., a daughter of the late
Luther and Molly Cossin Quickel.
She was a member or and pianist
: lor the Point Pleasant Church of
: Christ In Christian Union, Point
: Pleasant, W.Va.
· Stlrvlvors Include a daughter,
Jean Forbus, Inverness, Fla.;
two sons, Joseph Dwight Powell
and Thomas William Powell,
. both of Orlando, Fla.; seven
grandchildren, Penny Madden.
Brandon, Fla., Michael Powell,
VIcki Billings, Scott Powell and
Mark Powell, all of Orlando,
Fla.; David Forbus, Point Pleasant, W.Va. , and Zachery For·
bus, Inverness. Fla.; {our great
grandchildren; two sisters,
Louise McClure, Orlando, Fla.,
and Gertrude Miller, South Cha·
rleston, W.Va.; two sisters-in·
-law, Isabelle Powell, Middleport, and Louise Hilbert,
Cincinnati.
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by her
husband, Joseph Dwight Powell,
In 1984; . and one brother;
Everette Quickel, of Oak Hill,
W.Va.
Services will be Wednesday, 2
p.m ., at Rawllng-Coats· Blower
Funeral Home, Middleport, with
Rev. William Bud Hatfield.
Friends may call at the funeral
home for two hours prior to
services on Wednesday . Burial
will be In Riverview Cemetery.

Carl Matlack

Lester Ray Rickard, 90, Letart,
died Monday, Dec. 5, 1988, at his
residence.
Born SepL 18, 1898 in Letart, he
was a son of the late Perry and Lura
Huffman Rickard.
. Also preceding him in death was
his wife, Eunice M. Rickard, who
died in 1973.
He was a farmer, and a member
of the SL Made Lutheran Church.
He is survived by one daughter,
Mrs. Donald (Loretta) M. Haynes,
Letart; one gllllldson, Barry
Haynes, Letan.
·
Service will be Thursday· at I :30
p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home, with the Rev. George
Weirick officiating.
Burial will follow in Hoffman
Cemetery.
Friends may call on Wednesday
from 6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral
home.

Weather
By United Press International
Tuesday, mostly sunny and
breezy. Warmer with highs near
50. Southwest winds 15 to 25 mph.
Tuesday . night, becoming
partly cloudy. Low in themtd 30s.
. Wednesday, variable cloud!·
ness. High 40 to 45.
Extended Forecast
Thul'llday through Saturday
A chance of rain or snow
Thursday, fair and cold Friday
and Saturday . Morning low's will
be In the upper 20s to mid 30s
Thu)\sday, in the 20s Friday and
mld teens to mld 20s Saturday.
Highs will be In the mid 30s to
lower 40s Thursday, mid 20s to
mld30s Friday and upper 20s and
30s on Saturday.

Divorce action 6led

Burley prices stronger
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) Burley tobacco prices held firm
· to slightly stronger Monday as a
majority or grades continued to
average $163 per 100 pounds,
according to the Federal-State
Market News Service.
The lowest averages were
recorded for nondescript marketings, r ang!ng from $100 to $151
per hundred weight. Also, some
green and old crop tobacco not in
great demand.
Composition of the heavy volume changed very little from
last Thursday . Good and fair
quality combined accounted for
around three-fourths of sales and
abOut half was classified as tan
color.

A divorce action has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Allsha Renee Duncan,
Pomeroy, against James Albert
Duncan, Pomeroy.

November alanns
The Pomeroy Fire Depart·
ment answered five alarms In the
month of November, including
one structure fire, two auto fires
and two brush !IreS. The department'&amp; vehicles were driven a
total or 269 miles d.urtng the
month, reports Fire ChlefDanny
Zirkle.

ter in December, signed by finance program. Money tor the project
director George Miller, stating that wiD be feimbursed through Special
payment had n01 been received.
Education Funds, according to the
The board is expecteu .o come to superintendent
a decision on Webb's th1rd suspenA few empl6yments were made .
sion and possible dismissal at its by the board. Barblllll Scarberry
was hired as cook at Hannan High
next regular meeting on Dec. 19.
In other school board matters, · School, Charles McCallister as bus
the board approved an amendment operator, route 822, and a list of
to the Mason County Facility pan substitute secretaries and substitute
for $1,314.43. The money is to be aides was approved.
used for upgrading the trailer at
Tony R. Landis, health teacher
Ordnance Elementary School for and football coach at Point Pleasant
the • Preschool . Handicapped Junior High School submitted his
resignation, which was approved.
The board glllllted a grievance
for Joann CuUen. Board member
Chester PYatt stated the the bnard
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Mon- felt that she had met requirements
day's winning Ohio Lottery
of the policy for professional· leave.
numbers:
A personal leave bank policy
Dally Number
was place on review for comment
351.
until Dec. 15. The purpose of the .
Ticket sales totaled
PLB, the policy states, is to provide
$1,356,120.50, with a payoff due of protection for individ'uals who en$1,175,588.50.
counter severe medical hardship to
•
PICK-4
themselves, or in their household,
' 3812.
and who have exhausted their perPICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
sonal leave.
$3,048. PICK-4 $1 box1:1et pays
The policy is on public review,
$127.
and after the comment time, will be
either accepted or rejected by the
board,
Hospital news
The next board meeting will be
an
executive session with board at·
Veterans Memorial
tomey
Diane Johnson on Dec. 13.
Monday Admissions -Norma
Lee, Rutia.nd; Corden Randolph,
Racine; Katherine Feiler, Mid·
dleport; Goldie Hendren, Pomeroy; Earl Snyder, Pomeroy;
'\i'l
Nellie Connolly , Pomeroy;
Wanda Johnson, ~ac!ne.
Monday Discharges - Larry
Sigler, Kathleen Milhoan, Rus·
sell Cullums, Kathleen
·McNickle.

18
,, more

Daily Number
884
Pick4
.3795

days 'til
Christmas

•

at

Louery numbers

FIRST DEER - Todd Da·
v!dson, son of Allen and Diana
Davidson, of Zuspan Hollow
Road, Middleport, killed an
eight-point buck during last
week's deer season. This deer,
Davidson's first, was k!lled In
lower Meigs County.

Vol.39, No.149
Copyrighted 1 988

..

the

PAIN
with Pain Management, now available at

Home Medical Equipment
If you suffer from low back pain, migraine and ten·
slon headaches, post surgical pain, carpal tunnel syndrome~ acute muscle spasms and other forms of pain,
you may find relief In this new program through elec •
trlcal nerve stimulus and back braces. This form of
treatment has been proven successful!
For additional Information on Pain Management
and how It may help you call (3041 675-6100.

Westmoreland
KILLS DEER - Major Frank Nelson Reynolds, Mason, W.Va.,

a maintenance supervisor ol Central Operating's Philip Sporn
Pl1101, killed a nlne-polDt b.uck In the Vellowbush area of Racine.
The deer field dressed at 200 pounds, with a 21 and one-hail Inch ·
span. Earlier In the season, Reynolds kUied an eight-point buck In
Mason County, W.Va.

Family Care Center
Westmoreland FamUy Care Center

Is

located on Rt . 1, Mason, WV.

Stocks
'Dally stock prices
(As oliO: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp;; Loewl
Am Electric Power .,........... 26)'8
AT&amp;T ........... , ............ ,......... 29
Ashland Oil .................... .... 32%
Bob Evans ........ ........ ....... .. .15';4
Charming Shoppes .............. 12%
City Holding Co .... ............... 30
Federal Mogul.. ................... 48
Goodyear T&amp;R ..... .. ... , ........ 48%
Heck's ................. ......... ....... ';4
Key Ceniur!on .... .... .. ...... .... 15~
Lands' End ................... .. .... 27%
Limited Inc ........................ 26%
Multimedia Inc, ......... .... ...... 70
Rax Restaurants ........ ...... .. .. 3';4
Robbins &amp; Myers .. ;............. 12%
Shoney's Inc ........................ 7~
Wendy's lnt1 ........... .. ........... 5')i
Worthington Ind ..... ............. 22

27 MONTHS WITH MONTHLY INTEREST9.25%

$100,000 or More
$ 50,000 . $99,999
$ 10,000 $49,999
$ 2,500 $ 9,999

8.75%
8.25%
8.00%

2 Section, 18 Pages

26 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc. Newspape,r

Syracuse man killed
in Tuesday accident

Marriage licenses have been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Stephen Lee Baldwin, 38,
Racine, and Janet Sue Fetty, 32,
Racine; Ronald Wayne Stanley,
18, Racine, and Marsha Ann .
Mullins, 18, Racine: Harry Ed·
gar Stewart, 33, Cheshire, and ·
Carolyn J. Miller, 34 , Cheshire.

Pleasant Valley

•

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, December 7, 1988

Licenses issued

Westmoreland FamUy ~are Center
In cooperation with

•

Tonight, a In mid 30s.
Thursday , moslly cloudy.
Chance of snow or rain 30
percent.

ACCIDENT SCENE - Tralllc on State Route
338 near Apple Grove was blocked late Tuesday
afternoon as rescue workers"ilnd rreck~r crews

remove the truck Involved In the one-vehicle
accident which killed Syracuse resident Dana
Congo.

Workers say they
don'J·haV\e.a chance
'

SPOKANE, Wash. (UJ;'I) Contract workers at the nation's
federal nuclear plants have little
prot11ctlon fr'om reprisals lor
disclosing safety and health
problems because the govern·
ment runs a "kangaroo court"
for them, critics charged
Tuesday.
Nevertheless, the number 'of
contract employees at u.s.
Energy Department nuclear
plants willing to risk their jobs by
reporting violations Is growing,
said Tom Carpenter, staff attorney for the Government Accountability Project In Washington,
D.C.
Carpenter's group Is assisting
nuclear whistleblowers who say
they were fired or s.uffered other
reprisals for complaining about
or disclosing problems at Energy
Deparlment plants In Washington, Idaho, South Carolina, Ohio
and New York.
Carpenter said wh!stleblowers
at commercial nuclear plants
have protection from at least two
federal agencies, and those dl·
rectly employed by the Energy
Department have some limited
civil service protection.
But employees of Energy Department contractors like Westinghouse' and Du Pont, who run
the agency's nuclear plants,
have virtually no protection
against reprisals because the
Energy Department's appeals
process·is a sham.
Carpenter also charged that
the U.S. Labor Department often
refuses to hear their complaints,
many state labor agencies h,ave
no authority and some unions do
not aggres sively protect
workers.

"It's a n'on-remedy ,"he said of
the DOE appeals system. "lt' sIn
the kangaroo cpurt league of
remedle~ beca11.se it does not give
an employee any rights."
" We would not call It a
kangaroo court," Energy De·
partment spokeswoman Karen
Wheeless at the Hanford Nuclear
Reservation said. ''We think It'S
a system that works. We do tell
our contractors - with money
out of their pockets- when they
. need to Improve."
Added Pierre Saget, director of
Hanford's Quality Assurance
Division: "It's one man's opin·
ion. We have 12,000 people on the
site! Others have voiced comPll!lnts abOut things In the past
and have been satisfactorily
satisfied ...
In Washington state, Carpenter works with Jim Hutton, a
Yakima attorney . representing
abOut six present or former
Hanford workers.
"Because the DOE and the
coY,tractors are so closely con·
nected we don't think th~ em·
ployees can get a fair shake,"
said Hutton, who has settled two
of the Hanford cases out of court
and last week took a third to
federal court by suing a
contractor.
Carpenter and Hutton said the
DOE appeals process Is basically
an Internal Inves ligation with no
judge, no hearing, no record, no
opportunity to appeal and no
enforcement of DOE decisions
against contractors.
Some states and unions will try
to protect Energy Department
contract nuclear whlstleblowers,
but. Hutton said that's not always
the case.

Farm union
·see~s change
OTTAWA, Ohio (UPI)
President-elect George B.ush
must en~ct a farm policy that
PfOI(JjleS reasonable pr!c~ supports while ensuring that
farmers can earn a living !rom
the market: the Ohto' Farmers
Union said Tuesday.
The union also said it w!ll
become Increasingly important
for farmers to be weaned off
subsidies because of attempts to
reduce the detlcit.
VIrgil Thompson, the former
leader of the Ohio group, said a
new farm policy would ensure
that the nation's grain reserves
are not used to keep grain prices
below cost of production.
Thompson said that would
mean a "supply-management
system" that would allow the
farmer's Income . to come from
the market, because the nation's
grain reserves would be held
separately and used only for
emergencies, such as the 1988
drought.
.
The current policy allows reserves to be dumPe&lt;J into the
market to keep grain prices low,
which benefits grain handlers
and processors whose profits are
generated by volume, he said.
Thompson said lower grain
prices have forced many
farmers to become dependent on
subsidies for income. From 1980
to 198,7 the government portion of
farm Income has increased from
6 to 37 percent, he said.
"We must send a message to
Washington that the present
farm policies are a disgrace,"
Thompson told the union at its
meeting In Columbus last week.
During that time, profits for
farmers have fallen 7 percent
while profits for processors grew
14 perceni, .the farm union said. ·

Dana Congo, husband ofM,e!gs road and overturned. Damage
County Recorder Emmogene was heavy. No one was injured.
Holstein Congo, was killed In a Rayburn was charged with drlv·
Ing under the Influence and
one-vehicle accident at 1: 35 p.m.
Tuesday on State Route 338, near !allure to ma!nia!n control of his
Apple Grove, just east of Letart vehicle.
The Gallla -Meigs Post of the
Falls, according to the GalllaHighway Patrol Inves t!·
State
Melgs Post of the State Highway
,gated
an
accident at 4: 15 p.m.
Patrol.
Tuesday
on
SR 141.0.3 miles west
Troopers said Congo, 60, of
of
mile
post
17. No one was
College 'Road, Syracuse, was
pronounced dead at the scene. He injured. One driver was cited.
Troopers .said Jeffery Steger.
died of Injuries suffered when the
1977 International truck he was 19, PSR. Gallipolis, stopped In
driving went off the road , struck traffic and his vehicle was hit
a guard rail and overturned. from behlhd by a pickup truck
Damage was heavy. Congo was driven by Frederick McNe;ll, 51,
the only occupant of the truck. He Rt. . 2, Patriot. Damage. was
was taken to the Ewing Funeral minor to McNeal' s 1979 Ford
Bronco and moderate to Steger's
Home at Pomeroy.
pickup truck.
It was the sixth traffic fatality
The patrol cited McNeal for
or the year in Meigs County, and
ttie second fatality ln Meigs failure to stop within the assured
County In ten days. Steven clear distance.
There was no contact between
. McGrath, 27, Rt.1, Rutland, died
Nov. 26 as a result of internal the vehicles In an accident at 3: 10
Injuries suffered after being p.m. Tuesday on Neighborhood
ejected from a Jeep In an Road. 0.1 miles s'outh or SR 141.
accident on Corn Hollow Road , In There was no citation.
Troopers said vehicles driven
Rutland Township.
Another accident occurred at by Sean Harris , 17, 487 Kathy
1:15 p.m. Wednesday on Meigs Drive, Gallipolis, and Connie J .
County Township Road _112, 3.5 Rutt, 33, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, met on
miles south of SR 248. Ttfoopers a curve. Harris swerved off the
said car driven by Iva Ray- right side of the road to avoid a
burn, 50, Portland, went off the coll!slon. His pickup truck wen t
into a ditch. Damage was

moderate.
• The patrol cited one driver in
an accident at 9 a.m . Tuesday on
SR 7, 0.2 miles south of mile post
27. No one was injured.
Troopers said Arlen E . Saund·
ers, 57, Athens slowed in traffic.
His pickup truck was hit from
behind by another pickup truck
driven by David A. Lewis, 26,
Pomeroy. Damage was minor to ·
both veh icles.
The patrol cited Lewis for
failure to stop within the assured ·
clear distance.
Another accident occurred at
10:05 Tuesday on SR. 160, 0.4
miles north of mile post 8.
Troopers said a car dr !ven by
Barbara Glassburn, 45, Rt. 2,
Vinton, struck a horse that came
onto the roadway . The horse was
not kllled. The patrol did not
know who owned the horse.
Damage was moderate to the
car.
The patrql also received the
report Tuesday of a chipped
windshield. The accident occurred at 12:11 p.mn. Tuesday on.
US 35, about one mile east of Rio
Grande. Troopers said an unidentified vel}lcle flipped a rock aod
chopped the windshield of a car
driven by Floyd Moore, 57, Rt. 4,
Oak Hill. Damage was minor. No
one was injured.

a

Pearl Harbor attack reeul.led
P)iARL 'HARBOR. 'ilawali,
(UP!) - Thousands of sailors,
shipyard workers and others
gathered at Pearl Harbor today
to mark the 47th anniversary of
the surprise · Japanese attack
that hurled the United States Into
World War II.
The National Park Service
estimated some 6,000 people
would line the harbor to mark the
anniversary of the attack and
watch the Navy 's annual ceremony for·the 2,409 people who died
in the early Sunday morning
assault.
The ceremony on the USS
Arizona Memorial , a gleaming
white monument that spans the
sunken hull of the battleship
where 1,102 sailors remain en·
tombed, was to begin with
welcoming remarks and an Invocation, followed by a minute of
silence observed at 7:55 a.m.
local time - the 'lime· 47 years
ago the Japanese began their
attack.
The silence was to be broken by
the roar of four Hawaii Air
National Guard jets streaking
overhead: one ofthem veering off
in the l'mlsslng m·a n'' formation .
Wreaths were to be placed on
the memorial by leaders of
veterans' organizations and com·
munlty groups. The Navy's 150
Invited guests were expected tq
file to the railing one by one and
drop flowers into the oily water
above the sunken battleship.
The ceremony was planned to
continue with the national anthem and speeches, followe.d by
1

•

the Navy hymn and a benedic·
lion. A Marine Corps rifle detail
was to offer a 21-gun salute. and
the service was scheduled to end
with the playing of taps, with one
bugler echoing another at !&gt;ach
end of the memorial.
A Georgia man, G.P. Manning
of Savannah, remembered the
attack he witnessed as a 24-yearold stationed aboard the USS
Regal, which was moored not far
from the USS Arizona.
•'In my dreams, Is till see those
planes coming over me with red
spots, dropping bombs. like rain·
drops, ships exploding, and our
· people trying to fight back,"
Manning said in an Interview in
Georgia.
What Manning said disturbs
him the most is the memories he
has of the smell of burning
human flesh and bodies floating
amid oU that poured into the
harbor from the hulls of the
sinking U.S. destroyer fleet.
"It was instant death for some
of those sailors. We were taking
men out of the water that you
couldn't see anything wrong
with, but the explosion had burst
everything In them, " he recalled
in slow, deliberate speech.
On that morning 47 years ago,
Japanese aircr,aft from six aircraft carriers massed in the air
off Oahu's northern tip and then
began a relentless attack on the
96 ships moored in the harbor and
other Hawaii military
Ins tal lations.
Around the island and Its
approaches, 25 Japanese subma-

• rlnes had quietly maneuver~ ·to
points where they could pick off
battleships that escaped the air
attack.
In carefully coordinated at·
tacks they. had been' practicing
for three months. thl', 190 planes
roared down on the harbor that
had been calm aitd serene.
The Japanese planes bombed
and strafed Americans on ship
and shore, but their prime target
was Battleship Row along the
southeast shore of Ford Island in
the harbor, where seven battleships were moored. .
The planes were armed with
torpedos specially designed and
adjusted for the short, shallow
runs required at Pearl Harbor. In
less than an hour, 18 ships of the
Pacific fleet were sunk or heavily
damaged.
In all, 2,409 Americans were
killed and 1,178 wounded In the
atta'Ck, which also r!lduced 188
planes to ruin and damaged ·159
others.
The Japanese casualties : 64
dead; 29 planes, five midget
subs, one reconna!sance destroyed. One Japanese soldier
was captured.
The next day , President Frank·
lin D. Roosevelt addressed a joint
session of Congress.
"Yesterday, Dec . 7, 1941 - a
date whl~illllve 'In Infamythe United States of America was
suddenly and deliberately at tacked by nav al and air forc es of
the Empire of Japan ," Roosevelt
sal d.

~

EDDIE ALBERT FOR BELTON£

''Bellone had the
answer to
my hearing
problem.•.find out
if they can ·
·
help you too!''
Bellone Is offering

Pomeroy has five

would have been paid for extra
classes that he taught, he would
have received' around $7,000. But
that didn'tlxxher him, he says, be.·
cause he wanted his children to at·
tend classes here.
Last year, Webb says he taught
two classes second semester, which
would have nened him around
$3,600 extra pay. Tuition would
have run around$1 ,700.
Webb said that he thought the
agreement had been approved by
the board, but when he discussed 11
with them in executive session at
Monday night's meeting, they said
there was never an~ing written
down, and it couldn t be found in
the records.
"It was a gentlemen's agreement,
but suddenly, someone's not a
gentleman anymore," Webb commented.
At last nij!ht's meeting, the board
tabled making a decision on collecting tuition, after they came out
of an executive session that lasted
for more than an hour.
Chambers had not returned a
telephone call to respond to in·
quiries by the Point Pleasant Register at press !ime this morning.
In a letter of response that Webb
address¢ to the school board, he
stated that the working anangement
had obviously been of greater
monetary value to the people of
Mason County, in terms of dollars
spent.
Webb said that the first time he
heard of this bill, was when he
received an unsigned bill in
November for $1,791.37, but with
payments to be made to the Mason
County Board of Education. ·
He then received a follow-up let- ·

d eaths-----'

Marybell Barber Rowels, 56,
Carl M. Matlack, 64, Tuppers
218 Linden Drive, Painesville, Plains, died Sunday at St. Jo·
formerly of Meigs County, died seph's Hospital in Parkersburg,
early Monday at the Cleveland W. Va.
·
CliniC following an extended
Mr. Matlack was bor n Dec. 28,
Illness.
1924 at Tuppers Plains, a son of
A homemaker, Mrs. Rowels the late Howard and Velmli
was born July 13, 1932 at Swindler Matlack. He was reReedsville, a daughter of Lola tired from the U. S. Armed
Reed Barber and the late Delbert Forces and was a veteran of
Barber.
·World War Il He belonged to the
Surviving are her husband, Veterans of Foreign Wars In
James Rowles; three daughters, Tuppers Plains.
Sharon Rowles, at home; Mrs.
Surviving are a brother, Clair
Richard (Kathy) Day and Mrs. Cassidy, Tuppers Plains; a sis·
B. (Kimberly) Ludwig, and a ter, Dorothy Lambert, Apache
son, James, Jr., all of Paines- Junction, Ariz. , and several
ville; her mother, Lola Barber, nieces and nephews.
Reedsville; three sisters, Mrs.
Besides his parents, he was
Thelma Smith. Mrs. George preceded In death by his wife,
(Margaret) Buckley, both of Louise Kendrick Matlack; a
Reedsville; Kathleen Miles, Na- sister, Leota Cooper and a
ples., Fla.; four brothers, Jerry brother, Lowell Matlack.
Barber, Montana; Wilbert
Services will be held at 10 a .m.
Barber and Ronald Barber, both Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
of Reedsville, and Kenneth of Home with the Rev. Billy C.
Hebron. Also surviving are five Murphy officiating. The Tuppers
grandchildren and several nie- Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
ces and nephews.
wlll conduct graveside military
Besides her father, Mrs. Row- rites at the Tuppers Plains
els was preceded in death by two Cemetery., Friends may call at
infant brothers.
the funeral home from 7 to 9 this
Services will be held ' at the evening and from 9 to 10 a.m.
Spear and Mulqueeny Funeral Wednesday. Friends may conhome, 667 Mentor Ave., Paines- tribute in hls memory of the
ville at 11 a.m. Wednesday. Kidney Dialysis Research FounBurial will be In the Painesville dation, St. Joseph Hospital,
.Cemetery. Friends may call at Parkerburg.
the funeral home from 10 a.m. to
9 p.m. today.
Lestw Rickard

:Vivian Powell

Ohio Lottery

Mason board... _co_n_t_tn_u_e_d_fr...:om_p_a~&lt;_e_t_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:..___

-Local news briefs

.l ..-~

.

1

Take Advantage of this Limited Time lnvestment
Opportunity Of'!IY at Ohio Valley Bank.
THIS LIMITED OFFER MAY BE WITHDRAWN AT ANY TIME.

FOR INFORMATION:

446-2631 • 1•800-GO TO OVB • (468-6682)

FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING TESt

BBTOIH'S NEW LOCATION NOW OPEN
Dl. JOHN I. IIIGEWIY'S OFFICE
224 EAST MAIN, POMEIOY, OHIO
THUISDAY, DECl MIEI I
FIOM 9:00 TO 12:00 NOON
,

UMWA AND UAW PROVIDER

Rutland firemen elect officers
New officers for 19S9 were elected at the recent meeting of the
Rutland Fire Department held at the headquarters.
Named as co-presidents were Charles Barrett, Jr. and Jeff
Snowden.
The other officers eleeted were Dan Davis, vice president; Fred
Williamson, secretary; Homer Parker, .treasurer; Guy Hunter,
reporter.
Also elected were Blll Williamson, chief; Charles Rife and
David Davis, assistant chiefs; David Wllllamson, captain; Jeff
Snowden and Charles Barrett, III, first lieutenants; Mike
Wlllford and Carlos McKnight, second lieutenants; and Dan
Davis and CarJos ..McKnlght, training officers.

Water office will be closed
'.

So take Eddie Alben's advice - visit the Beltone Hearing Aid
Specialist today for a FREE HEARING TEST. Come in with
coupon for test.
~
Call 'IOU Free Number 1-8()()..634-5265 for immediate appointment.
COUPON

Local news briefs.-- Chambers says Webb was 'not singled out'

~~&amp;

""" HlBI&lt;l
LENDER

Water will be off today (Wednesday). and Thursday, on
Second St. imd Water St. In Syracuse. to accomodate work on
the Jines. The-Syracuse Water Board Ofllce wlll be closed on
Thursday, but will be open Friday and Monday.
Contlnu~ on page 9

ByJEA~ESURFACE

·

OVPStalf

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. MaSon County School Superinten·
dent Charles Chambers said
Thesday that Bill Webb was not
singled out or harrassed when he
was asked to pay out-of-state tuition for his daughter.
A Wahama High School
student's parent also received a bill.
. Chambers says ·he was just following up on a parent complaint and
the direction of the school board
when' he asked for out-of-state
students who were not paying lui·
tion to be identified and billed.
Webb, from Gallipolis, had been
suspended by the school board for
the third time this year for not fol·
lowing a teacher dress code when
he received the tuition bill for
$1,791.37 · the first he has received

since his children have attended ted him in the county," the teacher
school in MasQn County.
said. She received a biU in Novem. Though the parent complained ber of this school year.
that there were about eight students
She added that she could n01 af.
coming from Ohio and not paying ford to keep her child in school
tuition to Mason County Schools, here at a tuition mte of $1,791.37.
only two have been named. The "I feel terrible for him • he doesn't
other, a Wahama High Schoo.! ath· want to leave. I don't see why they
Jete from Pomeroy, Ohio, who is can't !rive a teacher a little bit of a
involved in many school activities, break~'
also received a tuition notice. . Thacker said she also received a
Chambers said that there were bill abnut the same time last year
previously more sttidents than two, when Meigs County teachers were
. but some have since graduated.
on sttike, but it was dropped. "I just
Sue Thacker, a teacher at New got one notice, but it was never enHaven Elementary in Mason forced. They just said not to worry
County and mother of the Wahama about it I have never had . any
student, criticized the timing of the trouble with the beard or anything.
notice.
I don't agree, but that's just my
"I hate to mess up his high opinim."
school career, but I guess I'll have 1 Thacker is a member of the West
to take him out and put him in Vuginia Education Association,
school in Ohio. If theY had told me and the organiution is handling the
this summer, I wouldn't have star· · matter for her. "I didn't know

Give A Gilt Suhscription To The Oailv Senlinel This Huli[lay Season

where else to tum. It· was either
that, or take him out immediately."
Thacker also said she had heard
people say Ohio children were get·
ling a free ride. "But I'm paying
West Virginia taxes."
The principals were asked to tum
in those names. and the students'
parents were billed for only this
school year, Chambers said.
Though Webb- wbo has never
received a blition notice until this
school year - told the school
board that he had a son of understanding with the school system
previously that extra classes he
taught were in lieu of tuition for his
children, Chambers said he or the
board members found no evidence
of an agreement like that
"I'm not familiar with a previous
agreement • none that we could find
anyway. There were no contractural
Continued on page 9

'

I

·-

Crtll 9UZ·Zl5ti

~

..~--

---- -

--·

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